Weekly Chart

Weekly Chart

A weekly chart is the data series of price actions for a traded security. Weekly charts can help traders to view security price trends from a broader perspective than the day-to-day — or hour-by-hour — price action seen in daily or intraday charts. For example, a weekly line chart may only include the weekly closing price, while a weekly candlestick chart will display the open, high, low, and close for the week. A weekly chart — set to display in a weekly time frame — will show high, low, open, and close for the entire week but will not show the day-by-day trading movements within that week. Since they provide a visual display of prices over a longer time, some indicators may be different than daily price charts, or may help to confirm daily price chart pattern inferences.

Weekly charts summarize the key points of data for all the daily trading sessions that week.

What Is a Weekly Chart?

A weekly chart is the data series of price actions for a traded security. On a weekly chart, each candle, bar, or point on a line represents the price summary for a single week of trading. Candlestick charts and bar charts are the most common types of charts used by traders and investors.

A weekly chart — set to display in a weekly time frame — will show high, low, open, and close for the entire week but will not show the day-by-day trading movements within that week.

Weekly charts can be compared with daily charts.

Weekly charts summarize the key points of data for all the daily trading sessions that week.
This time frame for charts is usually associated with longer-term forecasting and analysis.
Weekly charts comfortably display one to two years of data on the screen at a time, making them a convenient way for analysts and investors to see the long-term trend of a security.

Understanding a Weekly Chart

Weekly charts are used by technical analysts to gauge the long-term trend of a given asset. A weekly chart can vary in appearance depending on what form of chart the analyst chooses to use.

For example, a weekly line chart may only include the weekly closing price, while a weekly candlestick chart will display the open, high, low, and close for the week. This chart construction is used to give a long-term view of the security because it includes much more historical price movement than an equivalent period day chart. Oftentimes, weekly charts can be added to a trader’s display and used in comparison to daily charts and volume charts.

Weekly charts comprise a summary of data from all days of the week. The highest and lowest prices in those five trading sessions, regardless of the day they traded that week, become the high and low for the weekly marker.

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Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021

The figure above shows how each individual day-data for the week becomes summarized into a single candle. The weekly candle at the end doesn't look like any of the individual daily candles, and it merely nets out the trading action into a single small body with a large trading range. But for the purposes of those who review a weekly chart, that is all the information they need.

Advantages of Weekly Charts

Weekly charts can help traders to view security price trends from a broader perspective than the day-to-day — or hour-by-hour — price action seen in daily or intraday charts. Since a weekly chart can show a year's worth of trading in only 52 candles or bars, the trends or patterns they form imply that any forecast that comes from them will likely last a month (or several months). Institutional analysts are looking for longer-term opportunities than short-term traders are, and weekly charts are more likely to be relevant to what they want to know.

Weekly charts can be used in conjunction with daily charts to confirm price trends and buy/sell signals. Similar to daily charts, weekly charts can be used to identify price channels with bullish and bearish trends. Since they provide a visual display of prices over a longer time, some indicators may be different than daily price charts, or may help to confirm daily price chart pattern inferences.

Weekly charts may also be used by less active investors to follow and identify long-term price trends in the securities they follow. Many investors will view weekly charts on the securities they are invested in to watch for changes in long-term trends or signals that the investment may be potentially beginning a downtrend.

Special Considerations

All types of investors may also choose to follow monthly charts. Monthly charts will show an even broader view of a security because prices are charted monthly. In all instances, it can also be helpful to overlay a price chart with a moving average of the prices. Moving average studies are followed closely by technical traders regardless of the time frame they trade. The moving average and moving average envelope channels can also be useful for longer-term investors who wish to follow their investment’s price in a weekly or monthly chart.

Related terms:

Bar Chart

A bar chart shows where the price of an asset moved over a period of time and is useful for tracking prices and aiding in trading decisions. read more

Closing Price

Even in the era of 24-hour trading, there is a closing price for a stock or other asset, and it is the last price it trades at during market hours. read more

Forex Chart

A forex chart graphically depicts the historical behavior, across varying time frames, of the relative price movement between two currency pairs. read more

Daily Chart

A daily chart is a graph of data points, where each point represents the security's price action for a specific day of trading. 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

Equivolume

Equivolume charts meld price and volume information into every data point and visually depict it as rectangular bars for the period in question. read more

Line Chart

A line chart connects a series of data points with a line and is used by traders to monitor closing prices. read more

Moving Average (MA)

A moving average (MA) is a technical analysis indicator that helps smooth out price action by filtering out the “noise” from random price fluctuations. read more

Outside Reversal

Outside reversal is a chart pattern that shows when a security’s high and low price for the day exceed those achieved in the prior day’s trading session. read more

Technical Analysis of Stocks and Trends

Technical analysis of stocks and trends is the study of historical market data, including price and volume, to predict future market behavior. read more