Chart Spotlight Top Advisor's Corner Learning Center Members Help
       
 
       
     
     
  Arms Index (TRIN)  
     
       
   
 
[ Glossary menu ]

The purpose of the TRIN (also called the ARMS Index after its inventor, Richard Arms) is to express the relationship of volume in advancing issues to volume in declining issues. When the market is rising we want to see more volume going into advancing issues than declining issues. When this doesn't happen, negative divergences occur. The opposite is true in declining markets. A chart of the index will display points where the market is oversold and overbought as well as divergences between the market and the TRIN.

The basic raw calculation is as follows:

Advancing Stocks/Declining Stocks
--------------------------------------------
Advancing Volume/Declining Volume

This raw calculation can be used "as is"; however, most often the daily ratio is smoothed by moving averages of varying periods.

Another way to calculate the TRIN is the "open" method, by which the ratio is calculated from a moving averages of the components rather than calculating a moving average of the daily ratio of the components. We feature the open method and use a 10-day moving average.

Here is the formula for the 10-Day Open Arms:

Last 10 day's Advances/Last 10 day's Declines
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Last 10 day's Advancing Volume/Last 10 day's Declining Volume

We also provide charts of the TRIN 4-day moving average (short-term), TRIN 21-day moving average (intermediate-term), and 55-day moving average (long-term).

On our charts we reverse the scale so that oversold readings show as bottoms and overbought readings as tops.

 
   
       
  Back to Learning Center Menu