June 2005
Trading Tip:Alan Square
Alan Kelland's Box Trading Method
A draw tool growing in popularity is the Alan Square, named after its
inventor Alan Kelland. Alan's method is first and foremost price
action. The square serves as a structure to create
- Opportunities
- Targets and
- Protection
The most important aspects are to look for only the best quality setups,
focus on identifying follow through bars, and never fade a zone (i.e., never
sell a support zone, never buy a resistance zone).
Background
Alan developed his methods trading the ten-minute all-sessions Dow Jones
Index futures (YM contract). This article and the trading strategies
described reflects his work using that instrument. They
are suggested uses only and as such are not a complete compilation of all his
methods. However, traders have
successfully applied the square to the S&P futures, DAX, Crude Oil, Euro,
Bund, Bond, Russell and even stocks. Similarly, while the method is geared
towards 10-minute bars, Alan has also used the square on various intra-day time
frames and Daily charts. You are encouraged to experiment and find what
works for you.
Though Alan does not use indicators (e.g., MACD, Stochastic, etc), many
traders do and have added them to their charts. Price action strategies
that Alan has shared to take advantage of these opportunities, protections, and
targets are summarized in this article.
Components
The major components of the Alan Square are:

1) Angulars
- a) Major - Up and Down angulars from the High, Low, and square Midpoint.
- b) Minor - Up and Down angulars parallel to the Major, but from the 25%
and 75% quartiles.
Note: Only Major angulars create opportunities. Minor angulars are
primarily used for protection.
2) Quartiles
- Yesterdays Low - 0% level (See below for how to determine Daily High
and Daily Low)
- Yesterday’s High - 100% level
- Midpoint - 50% of yesterday’s Daily High and Daily Low
- Quartiles 25% and 75% of yesterday’s High-Low range
- Extensions (125% to 200% or more of High-Low range)
3) Apexes
- First apex at 10:20 Eastern time zone (ET)
- Second apex at 14.10 Eastern time zone
Note: Angulars do cross at 12:20 ET, but as it is the center of the Dead
Zone, these
apexes are second in importance for their timing value.
4) Zones
- Support Zone (SZ)
- Resistance Zone (RZ)
- Neutral Zone
- Dead Zone (DZ)
Of all the components, the angulars are the most important. Horizontals
serve mainly to create zones and targets. The zones arise from the
intersection of the angulars and horizontals and are used to create
opportunities through the support and resistance nature of the angulars.
The apexes on either side of the DZ, at 10:20
ET and 14:10 ET create price-time opportunities.
Price as it moves through the square offers trading opportunities primarily
through use of the angulars and zones, and at times the quartiles, as described
later in the strategies section. Examples are follow-through (FT) bars,
violations and obligations, 2Z, VBT, and apex splitters.
One important aspect of the Alan Square is that it tells the trader where
price did not, and cannot, go.
Start and End Times of the Alan Square
The standard square “Chart1” spans the pre-open through regular
trading hours (RTH) session. It starts at 08:20 Eastern Time (ET), ie,
NYC time, and ends at 16:20 ET. It takes the highest High and lowest Low
from 08:00 ET of the prior day to 08:00 ET of the present day.
There is also a “Chart2” square that spans the entire Globex and RTH
sessions. This will be referred to in this document as the alternate
square. For the YM, this starts at 20:10 ET and ends at 17:.00 ET.
Alan uses a four-day rotation method that he calls PVAC, an acronym generally
standing for the nature of the price action likely to be encountered on those
days. PVAC is described in more detail in the PVAC section.
Construction Methods
There are various ways to draw the Alan Square. The implementation of
the Alan Square in Ensign Windows is just one more of many reasons to switch to
Ensign. Those who do not use Ensign can still draw the square 'the old
fashioned way', how Alan drew his square for ten years prior to his getting
Ensign Windows. The last two methods can be adapted by non-Ensign users to
manually draw an Alan Square. Click on one of these excellent links for
instructions.

Helpful Studies, DYOS, & Templates
Traders have come up with a number of handy DYOS (Design Your Own Study,
unique to Ensign) that help them. These DYOS are provided as templates. Traders
should be knowledgeable about how to download and apply them and are referred to
the Ensign Help pages
for further reading.
The following templates are current as of 27 Jun 2005. Right Click and Save to an Ensign Templates
folder.
Also see dacharts.com
templates page. Here is a list of trading
hours for various markets (thanks sputnik, current as of June
2005)
Price Action Strategies
Price action is viewed by Alan in many ways, but to keep it simple, there are
two areas of focus: bar relationships to nearby bars and larger pattern
completions (targets).
As price moves across the square's zones and angulars, the push-pull and emotional
extremes can be exploited by the trader when viewed as territory gained or lost,
proximity areas of protection or open areas of exposure, and pattern completion
targets.
The Angulars, Bars, and Zone ideas will be presented first. However, of
all the strategies, learning to identify quality follow-through (FT) bars
is the most important, followed by Violations.
FTs and Violations will over-ride, or at worst 'shade' the broadly general
'reads' of angulars, bars, and zones. If you plan to use this method, your
time would be well spent studying the FT bar concept.
1) Early Read of Chart
The alternate Alan Square that spans the Globex session can be used as an early read for
the standard Alan Square.
Once the standard square is in place (after 8.20, quickly assess Bar1, and then, Bar2
characteristics using these guidelines:
- Proximity of Bar1 to nearby angulars and horizontals
- The placement Bar2
- Above, below, or through the H, L, or Mid
- If through the High, Low, or Mid, this creates a 2Z possibility for Bar2
- Above, below, or through a quartile

2) Angulars
The square exists only to draw angulars (meaning, angulars are the most
important part of the square)
Trade short under Down Angulars, especially above the 75% quartile
Trade long above Up Angulars, especially below the 25% quartile
Price proximity of an angular when in a trade provides a price level for
protection
The further from the angulars price goes, the more your trade is exposed
and lacking protection.
Price riding the top of a down angular will be agonizingly slow.
Price surfing an up angular targets the end of the line plus one quartile
Price crossing the angular targets the exact end of the line
Price surfing under an angular, trade at the kisses.
3) Zones
To recap, there are four zones and two Apexes
- Support (SZ)
- Resistance (RZ)
- Neutral (NZ)
- Dead Zone (DZ)
- Apexes (not technically zones, but the meeting point of various zones)
Within the zones there are close in areas where the square's structure diminishes
the potential for rewarding a position taken nearby, i.e., left and right of an
apex).
There are also areas of proximity protection, e.g., a price line where a trader
can put his stop and protect his position, such as a major angular.
The guidelines below are general. Bear in mind the previous caution that FTs
in particular and many times Violations will take precedence. Incorporate your
study of FTs and Violations when using the Zone guidelines.
Support Zone (SZ)
- Long as low down in the SZ as price action allows
- Longs on the right side of a SZ can use the up angular as protection.
- Generally, do not initiate a short position in a SZ.
- Bars that break a SZ to the right of an apex creates a VBT (Vacuum Back
Targets), discussed below.
- Bars that break a SZ on the left of an apex fall into an RZ and create a
potential to short
Resistance Zone (RZ)
- Short as high up in the RZ as price action allows
- Shorts on the right side of a RZ can use the up angular as protection.
- Generally, do not initiate a long position in a RZ.
- Bars that break a RZ the right of an apex create a VBTs (Vacuum Back
Targets), discussed below.
- Bars that break a RZ on the left of an apex rise into a SZ and create a
potential to long
Dead Zone (DZ)
- As price goes into the Dead Zone, so it will go out of the DZ, i.e.,
- If it goes into the DZ with a down bias, it will eventually exit with
a down bias, or
- If it goes into the DZ with a up bias, it will eventually exit with a
up bias
- Scalp trades countertrend to the entry into the DZ, i.e.,
- Scalp shorts high up in the RZ of the DZ, or
- Scalp longs low down in the SZ of the DZ
- The maximum number of bars in a DZ is 23
- Only the primary square (the square created by yesterdays H and L) has a Dead
Zone. The zones in the extension squares are generally treated as typical
Support or Resistance.
- Only the standard square has a DZ, i.e., the alternate square does not have a DZ
Neutral Zone (NZ)
- Refrain from initiating a trade in the NZ until
- Long when price is low in the SZ of the NZ
- Short when price is high in the RZ of the NZ

Apex
- The two major Apexes are the outside boundaries of the DZ
- Apexes, being the meeting point of six zones, provide protection left and
right. This is what Alan calls a give-them-no-oxygen area.
4) Bar 1, Bar 2, Bar 8, and Bar 11
On the standard square, number the bars starting with Bar 1 at
8:20-8:20 ET, Bar 2 follows, and so forth. There are a total of 47 bars in
the day, 23 of which have the potential of being in the DZ, and one of
which (Bar 1) is never traded. Only Bar 1, Bar 2, Bar 8, and Bar 11
carry pattern significance in Alan's method.
'Fleece bars' are long bars which lure overly-emotional traders in, but
quickly reverse to 'fleece' traders of their money. Bar 8, which is the
opening 10 minute bar for the RTH session, and Bar 11, which is the end of
the first 30 minute opening range, provide such opportunities which Alan
Square traders can use.
Alan will initiate a trade only after the close of the 10 minute
bar. The only exceptions are Bar 2, Bar 8, and Bar 11, which he will
trade within its open and close.
Bar 1 - the 8:20 ET
bar Example
of Bar1
Never trade Bar 1
Bias the close of the day on Bar 1
Trade Bar 1 bias after lunch hour
Bar 2 - the 8:30-8:40 ET
bar Bar1-Bar2
Example
Only Bar 2 can “uncheck” Bar 1 (i.e., only Bar 2 can over-ride a
read from Bar 1)
Only Bar 2 Open as it relates to Bar 1 Close is used:
- Bar 2 Opens above Bar 1 Close, no significance
- Bar 2 Opens equals Bar 1 Close
- A initial head fake is likely, so fading the move is a potential
- May signify that the market will close unchanged from Bar 8 Open
- Bar 2 Opens below Bar 1 Close,
- Alan doesn’t wait for the bar to close to initiate a short
- With one exception, if bar 2 is outside to bar 1, it is
generally bullish, whether up or down, so do not short in the
first hour.
- When Bar 2 is a 2Z, price will often return to that price before
14:00 ET
Bar 8 - the Open Bar, 9:30-9:40 ET
- Bar 8 has only one rule: If Bar 8 is at or near the LOD
(low of day), Do not short
- A Bar 8 long is a quick, TMAR trade (Take the Money and Run)
Bar 11 - The end of the 30m Opening
Range, 10:00-10.10 ET Bar11
HOD Example
- Alan will not buy a Bar 11 High of Day (HOD)
- Treat as a high probability fleece bar at or near HOD (high of day)
for a TMAR short
- Use on V and A days
5) Territory: Win it, Prove it (FT), Lose it (Violations)
Winning Territory
The Alan Square creates many opportunities for price to “win territory”
with penetrations, “prove itself” with FT bars, and "give it
up" or lose it through violations.
Territory is won when a bar penetrates an up angular and closes above
it in the case of a move up, or when it pierces a down angular and closes
below it in the case of a move down. Territory may also be won in a
similar fashion with respect to horizontals.
Having won the territory, price must then “prove itself”. It
does so by immediately printing a follow-through (FT) bar and by
maintaining proximity to the angular, or by not violating (giving up) the
nearby angular or horizontal. Territory that is not won will not be
defended.
Follow-Through (FT) Bar
Alan's
examples of FT bars
Traders can study the chart showing the various types of follow through
bars and then review prior days charts both statically and in playback to
better understand this very important concept.
In its simplest form, an FT bar is a Higher High (HH) and a Higher Low
(HL) (or a Lower High (LH) and Lower Low ( LL)) in the direction of a
trend. However, when a bar creates a HH and a HL, but the HL
violates its adjacent angular or horizontal, that is not a FT bar (a
non FT bar) as that violation gave up previously won territory.
Proximity
Proximity to an angular is quite strict. Price must stay close to
the angular, but must not penetrate it. When price is still
correctly trending relative to the nearby angular, but the slope of the
trend is creating distance from it, minor angulars may be placed to
protect the trend. However, the minor angulars do not in themselves
create opportunities, they serve only to protect.
Ranking FT Bars
An FT bar takes precedence over other obligations such as the 2Z, Apex
Splitter, or VBTs.
Territory won and confirmed by an FT bar can be ranked in importance as
follows:
- Won at an Angular
- Won at yesterday’s High or Low
- Won at the Mid
- Won at the Quartiles
If nothing has been won, there is nothing to protect.
Quality of FT Bar
A quality follow through bar going up will have a HH and a HL and will
close in the higher part of its bar. Likewise a quality FT bar going down
will have a LH and a LL and will close in the lower part of its bar.
A quality FT through a quartile is stating that the next quartile in
the direction of the trend (i.e., next down quartile or next up quartile)
can be expected as a target.
An FT bar is checked when the move continues in the direction of the
trend without violation of the FT bar. It becomes unchecked when the
low of the up FT bar is taken (or the high of a down FT bar is taken), i.e.,
the FT bar is no longer predictive.
Where people get trapped is they see a lousy (poor quality) FT bar and
immediately enter. The market has spoken, but has not activated
them. It is saying to expect lousy follow through.
A pattern completion target can be set by following the angular that
was won to its endpoint on the square.
Alan's
examples of hypothetical FT bars
Examples
of FT
Example
of FT with Target
Violations
After having won territory, should a bar then pierce the angular or
horizontal just won, a violation is created and price "gives up"
the territory.
In the case of an angular, the use of that angular to provide
protection is not to be trusted. In the case of a horizontal, it is
saying that price does not want to go into that territory, or that if it
does, it will not defend it.
Additionally, if that violation was also a VBT (see VBT section), this
should be noted on the chart as while the move may continue, odds of it
failing (intra-day) are established by that VBT.
6) Band Targets Example
of Bands
Price will often use the space between like angulars as a channel,
stepping down or up the channel successively through the quartiles. Alan
calls these bands.
When a channel gets violated, the pattern completion is the exact end
of the violated line. When a channel has not been violated, the pattern
target completion is a quartile extension of that line, extended each time
another band is won.
7) Vacuum Back Targets (VBTs) Example
of VBTs
If an up bar breaks up through a down angular or if a down bar breaks
down through an up angular, the price where the bar cut through the
angular creates a VBT. When this happens, a short horizontal line is
placed at that price point, which is now a return target for price.
VBTs exist to provide price targets. They are not themselves
entries. When the VBT is created higher up in a resistance zone, or
lower down in a support zone, the greater the potential for a high quality
return target. The lower the quality of a subsequent entry, the more
at risk is meeting the VBT target. Keep in mind the idea of
proximity providing protection and "open space" providing
exposure.
The VBT remains in effect until a subsequent price bar prints the VBT
price, at which point the VBT is considered “checked”, i.e. closed, and
no longer in play. The very next bar cannot uncheck a VBT.
8) 1-2-3 and 4th, a.k.a, “Fade the Fourth
Whatever” Example
of 1234 counts
The 123 pattern is a typical technical analysis pattern. The
principle is simple: having conditioned traders to anticipate a successful
test of a prior extreme three times, the forth attempt will be taken by
the inexperienced traders and faded by those who are aware of the pattern.
Alan does not count HH or LL swing-to-swing, but rather
bar-to-bar. Fading a fourth HH would thus be the fourth higher high
of a bar sequence. However, the fourth HH of a swing sequence is
also faded. Similarly, on trending days, fade the fourth band move.
9) 2-Zedder (2Z) Example
of 2Z and targets
A 2Z is a bar that opens in one zone, travels through another, and
closes in a third zone. The 2Z bar creates an obligation, i.e., price will
return to test the open.
10) Apex Splitter Example
of Apex Splitter
An Apex Splitter is a bar that traverses one of the two major Apexes.
Expect a reversal within 30m (3 bars).
Miscellaneous
- Once-Twice-Thrice
- Look for quality FT bars and trade only the best setups
- Unchecking a bar is not a signal, it is a warning
- If a line is violated twice, odds are it will be violated again.
- After a significant reaction to news, fade the move after 39 minutes
of the reaction to the news and anticipate a pullback to 50% of the
move
- The alternate Alan Square is useful on Mondays and Fridays.
- 80% of Friday’s will hit the midpoint (Example)
- Up days typically make move before noon, down days after 14.30ET
- For the U (September contract) only
-- fade an upside move of 60-minutes or ~75
points
-- fade a sixth HH and ~75 points
- Use a major (or minor) angular to manage your trades. When a line or
zone is won, trail the stop, surrender nothing
- ZB
(US Bond) likes zones, times, and quartiles
- Euro is all about symmetry. Likes 20 minutes after news, but best
are angulars right of whole session chart, above or below High or Low
- The Market’s duty is to inform with price action.
- No FT, no VBTs, no obligations, no mbh
- If a chart begins eroding profit, exit.
- As a trader, look for market distress and identify quality
exhaustion points
- We owe it to ourselves to follow the money. Trade the trending
markets.
PVAC Days and Alan's Method
PVAC is the acronym Alan uses for a four-day rotation cycle. The cycle
itself is circularly continuous every days of the week, forever, including
every holiday.
Thus if, for instance, Monday was a P, Tuesday is V, Wednesday is A,
Thursday is C. At this point the cycle repeats, with Friday being P,
Saturday being V, Sunday being A, and the following Monday being C.
One must first determine a valid and confirmed “PVAC” day to start
their cycle properly. The easiest way to do that is to apply the PVAC
template, which is coded to do the repeat cycle using the Ensign internal
calendar. One could also make a small calendar and color each day after a
known PVAC day is determined.
Having started, the cycle never changes. While each day tends to have
the characteristics shown below, like all cycle tools, there are
inversions, which will last a cycle or at times even more, and have
reasonable odds of inverting regularly.
A trader who wants to incorporate a four-day rotation cycle into their
work is encouraged to study for themselves whether this adds value.
Bonnie
Hill's Cycles pages may be of use to those who want to learn more
about rotation cycles.
The Alan's
Lessons page at dacharts.com has various annotated examples of price
action during specific PVAC days. The links below are to dacharts pages of
PVAC day examples.
| Day |
Color |
Characteristics |
| C-Day |
Yellow |
- Consolidation day, aka 'consoly' day. It may
not chop, but it may have an accumulation or distribution
quality to the action
- Trade often and trade fast
- Pattern traders fade 4HHs and 4LLs with
backfill/pullbacks 3 bars later
- Apexes and angulars tend to have less
importance
- Numerical traders trade after Bar8 open and
use support one horizontal below, resistance one horizontal
above
- C day opens often at the 25%
- The afternoon action tends to be opposite to
the morning action
|
| P-day |
Green |
- Often a trend day. Find the trend and enter
it.
- Often opens at the 75%
- Trade P-days against a quartile
- Watch for price to be above/below the first
apex: buy above or sell below
- Do not fade dead zone, minimal trading
|
| V-Day |
Red |
- Closes well for bulls
- Use your fleece bars Bar8 and Bar11
- Bar8 open often a V-day return target
- 'V' return comes early in day in bear moves,
late in day in bullish moves
|
| A-day |
Blue |
- Closes poorly for bulls
- Use your fleece bars 8 and 11
- Generally 'A' shaped, but may have a kick-leg
after 3pm
|
Other Uses of the Alan Square
Alan uses the square various ways on the Daily chart as well as with
other time frames. Here are some examples.
Traders have used the Alan Square in many ways. Here is a
sampling of their ideas:
Appreciation is extended to Alan Kelland, Ana Maria Gallo, Judy MacKeigan, and other
Alan Square traders for use of the materials in this newsletter. For more information about Alan's methods and using the Alan Square,
please join the Coffee House chat room in the Ensign chat
rooms and the Coffee House Ventri1o
voice room. Many excellent traders patronize these rooms (and
the B-Line chat rooms) who use the Alan Square everyday. Excellent
chart examples are posted each day to the www.dacharts.com
web site.
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