
Aroon Indicator and Uses
The Aroon indicator is a technical indicator that is used to identify trend changes in the price of an asset, as well as the strength of that trend. Aroon Down \= 2 5 − Periods Since 25 period Low 2 5 ∗ 1 0 0 \\begin{aligned} \\text{Aroon Up}&= \\frac{25-\\text{Periods Since 25 period High}}{25} \\ast100\\\\ \\text{Aroon Down}&=\\frac{25-\\text{Periods Since 25 period Low}}{25}\\ast100 \\end{aligned} Aroon UpAroon Down\=2525−Periods Since 25 period High∗100\=2525−Periods Since 25 period Low∗100 The Aroon calculation requires the tracking of the high and low prices, typically over 25 periods. 1. Track the highs and lows for the last 25 periods on an asset. 2. Note the number of periods since the last high and low. 3. Plug these numbers into the Up and Down Aroon formulas. The Aroon Up and the Aroon Down lines fluctuate between zero and 100, with values close to 100 indicating a strong trend and values near zero indicating a weak trend. The Aroon indicator is a technical indicator that is used to identify trend changes in the price of an asset, as well as the strength of that trend. The indicator is typically applied to 25 periods of data, so the indicator is showing how many periods it has been since a 25-period high or low. When the Aroon Up is above the Aroon Down, it indicates bullish price behavior.

What is the Aroon Indicator?
The Aroon indicator is a technical indicator that is used to identify trend changes in the price of an asset, as well as the strength of that trend. In essence, the indicator measures the time between highs and the time between lows over a time period. The idea is that strong uptrends will regularly see new highs, and strong downtrends will regularly see new lows. The indicator signals when this is happening, and when it isn't.
The indicator consists of the "Aroon up" line, which measures the strength of the uptrend, and the "Aroon down" line, which measures the strength of the downtrend.
The Aroon indicator was developed by Tushar Chande in 1995.
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Formulas for the Aroon Indicator
Aroon Up = 2 5 − Periods Since 25 period High 2 5 ∗ 1 0 0 Aroon Down = 2 5 − Periods Since 25 period Low 2 5 ∗ 1 0 0 \begin{aligned} \text{Aroon Up}&= \frac{25-\text{Periods Since 25 period High}}{25} \ast100\\ \text{Aroon Down}&=\frac{25-\text{Periods Since 25 period Low}}{25}\ast100 \end{aligned} Aroon UpAroon Down=2525−Periods Since 25 period High∗100=2525−Periods Since 25 period Low∗100
How to Calculate the Aroon Indicator
The Aroon calculation requires the tracking of the high and low prices, typically over 25 periods.
- Track the highs and lows for the last 25 periods on an asset.
- Note the number of periods since the last high and low.
- Plug these numbers into the Up and Down Aroon formulas.
What Does the Aroon Indicator Tell You?
The Aroon Up and the Aroon Down lines fluctuate between zero and 100, with values close to 100 indicating a strong trend and values near zero indicating a weak trend. The lower the Aroon Up, the weaker the uptrend and the stronger the downtrend, and vice versa. The main assumption underlying this indicator is that a stock's price will close regularly at new highs during an uptrend, and regularly make new lows in a downtrend.
The indicator focuses on the last 25 periods, but is scaled to zero and 100. Therefore, an Aroon Up reading above 50 means the price made a new high within the last 12.5 periods. A reading near 100 means a high was seen very recently. The same concepts apply to the Down Aroon. When it is above 50, a low was witnessed within the 12.5 periods. A Down reading near 100 means a low was seen very recently.
Crossovers can signal entry or exit points. Up crossing above Down can be a signal to buy. Down crossing below Up may be a signal to sell.
When both indicators are below 50 it can signal that the price is consolidating. New highs or lows are not being created. Traders can watch for breakouts as well as the next Aroon crossover to signal which direction price is going.
Example of How to Use the Aroon Indicator
The following chart shows an example of the Aroon indicator and how it can be interpreted.
Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2020
In the chart above, there is both the Aroon indicator and an oscillator that combines both lines into a single reading of between 100 and -100. The crossover of the Aroon Up and Aroon Down indicated a reversal in the trend. While the index was trending, prior to the reversal, the Aroon Down remained very low, suggesting that the index had a bullish bias. Despite the rally on the far right, the Aroon indicator hasn't shown a bullish bias yet. This is because the price rebounded so quickly that it hasn't made a new high in the last 25 periods (at the time of the screenshot), despite the rally.
The Difference Between the Aroon Indicator and the Directional Movement Index (DMI)
The Arron indicator is similar to the Directional Movement Index (DMI) developed by Welles Wilder. It too uses up and down lines to show the direction of a trend. The main difference is that the Aroon indicator formulas are primarily focused on the amount of time between highs and lows. The DMI measures the price difference between current highs/lows and prior highs/lows. Therefore, the main factor in the DMI is price, and not time.
Limitations of Using the Aroon Indicator
The Aroon indicator may at times signal a good entry or exit, but other times it will provide poor or false signals. The buy or sell signal may occur too late, after a substantial price move has already occurred. This happens because the indicator is looking backwards, and isn't predictive in nature.
A crossover may look good on the indicator, but that doesn't mean the price will necessarily make a big move. The indicator isn't factoring the size of moves, it only cares about the number of days since a high or low. Even if the price is relatively flat, crossovers will occur as eventually a new high or low will be made within the last 25 periods. Traders still need to use price analysis, and potentially other indicators, to make informed trading decisions. Relying solely on one indicator isn't advised.
Related terms:
Aroon Oscillator
The Aroon Oscillator is a trend-following indicator that gauges the strength of a current trend and the likelihood that it will continue. read more
Bear Market : Phases & Examples
A bear market occurs when prices in the market fall by 20% or more. read more
Bull Market : Characteristics & Examples
A bull market is a financial market in which prices are rising or are expected to rise. read more
Consolidation
Consolidation is a technical analysis term referring to security prices oscillating within a corridor and is generally interpreted as market indecisiveness. read more
Crossover
A crossover is the point on a stock chart when a security and an indicator intersect. read more
Directional Movement Index (DMI)
The directional movement index (DMI) is an indicator that identifies whether an asset is trending by comparing highs and lows over time. read more
Downtrend
A downtrend refers to the price action of a security that moves lower in price as it fluctuates over time. read more
False Signal
In technical analysis, a false signal refers to an indication of future price movements that gives an inaccurate picture of the economic reality. read more
Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD)
Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) is defined as a trend-following momentum indicator that shows the relationship between two moving averages of a security's price. read more
Oscillator
An oscillator is a technical indicator that tends to revert to a mean, and so can signal trend reversals. read more