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Educational only — not financial advice. Ichimoku gives context and bias, not certainty; price can chop through a thin cloud.
Concept · Definitive Guide

Ichimoku Cloud

A complete trend system in one glance — the cloud, the lines, the bias.

Overview

Ichimoku Kinko Hyo — "one glance equilibrium chart" — is a complete trend system in a single view. Five lines and a shaded cloud (kumo) tell you, at a glance, the trend, the momentum, and where support and resistance sit, both now and projected ahead.

It looks intimidating, but each line answers one clear question, and the cloud does most of the work.

Origins & history

How it works

Ichimoku Kinko Hyo — the cloud (kumo), Tenkan & Kijun price Tenkan Kijun cloud →
Price with Tenkan (blue) and Kijun (orange), the forward-projected cloud between Senkou A and B, and the lagging Chikou span. Above the cloud is bullish, below is bearish. (Illustrative.)
Tenkan-sen = (9-period high + 9-period low) ÷ 2 (conversion) Kijun-sen = (26-period high + 26-period low) ÷ 2 (base) Senkou A = (Tenkan + Kijun) ÷ 2, plotted 26 ahead Senkou B = (52-period high + low) ÷ 2, plotted 26 ahead Chikou span = close, plotted 26 periods back

The cloud is the band between Senkou A and B. Price above the cloud is bullish, below is bearish, and inside is undecided. A thick cloud is stronger support/resistance than a thin one.2

Market psychology & mechanics

Ichimoku encodes equilibrium: each line is a midpoint of recent ranges, so the chart constantly asks "where is fair value, and is price accepted above or below it?" The forward-shifted cloud projects that equilibrium ahead, turning support and resistance into a zone the whole market can see — part of why the levels can become self-reinforcing.

Honest assessment

Strengths

A genuinely all-in-one system: trend, momentum, and support/resistance in one disciplined view, with a built-in projection of future S/R. For trend-followers it imposes a clean, consistent process.

Evidence rating: no rigorous proof of edge beyond the trend-following and S/R ideas it bundles; where the cloud "works," it blends genuine moving-average logic with a self-fulfilling, widely-watched zone.

Weaknesses & failure modes

Professional uses vs. retail misuses

How professionals use it

  • The cloud as dynamic support/resistance and trend bias (above = bullish).
  • Tenkan/Kijun crosses confirmed by cloud position and the lagging span.
  • Cloud thickness as a gauge of how strong support/resistance is.

Common retail misuses

  • Trading every Tenkan/Kijun cross with no cloud context.
  • Ignoring the lagging span (Chikou) confirmation.
  • Treating a thin cloud as strong support.

Going deeper

Ichimoku is essentially a sophisticated moving-average and support/resistance system. Its strongest signals stack: price above cloud, Tenkan above Kijun, lagging span above price, and a bullish (green) cloud ahead — all aligned. Pair it with ATR for stops.

Practice

Price is above the cloud. What does that suggest?

A bullish bias — the cloud acts as support and the broader trend is up. It is context, not a guaranteed buy.

What forms the cloud (kumo)?

The area between Senkou Span A (average of Tenkan and Kijun) and Senkou Span B (mid of the 52-period range), both plotted 26 periods ahead.

What is the Chikou (lagging) span for?

The close plotted 26 periods back, used to confirm trend by comparing current momentum with past price.

This concept in the knowledge graph

PrerequisitesTrends, support/resistance
UnlocksAll-in-one trend & S/R reading
RelatedMoving averages, Bollinger Bands
Created byGoichi Hosoda (pub. 1969)

Resources

References (primary where possible)

  1. Ichimoku Kinko Hyo — history & the five lines (Goichi Hosoda, pub. 1969) — Wikipedia.
  2. Ichimoku Cloud calculation & interpretation — StockCharts.