W.D. Gann was an American trader (1878–1955) who developed many powerful mathematical tools for predicting stock and commodity prices. His Square of Nine is a spiral grid of numbers where each ring represents a 360° rotation around a central value.
The key insight is that the square root of price is connected to time and price movement. When price moves from one cardinal point to another on the spiral, it often finds natural support or resistance.
Step 1: √48400 = 220.00 (Root)
Resistance levels: R1 = (220.25)² = ₹48,510 | R2 = (220.50)² = ₹48,620 | R3 = ₹48,731 | R4 = ₹48,841
Support levels: S1 = (219.75)² = ₹48,290 | S2 = (219.50)² = ₹48,180 | S3 = ₹48,071 | S4 = ₹47,961
Instead of calculating manually, use NiftyZone's free Gann S9 Calculator. Enter the opening price and get all 8 levels instantly. It also auto-fills today's opening price when you select any stock.
Pivot Points are mathematical support and resistance levels calculated using the previous trading day's High, Low, and Close prices. They are one of the most popular tools for intraday traders in India and worldwide.
Camarilla pivots use a multiplier of 1.1 applied to the previous day's range. They are preferred by scalpers and short-term intraday traders.
Bank Nifty is the most liquid and volatile index in India. Daily movement of 300–800 points is normal. On high-volatility days (RBI policy, budget, results), it can move 1000–2000 points.
Calculate yesterday's Pivot Points using previous day's High, Low, Close. Note PP, R1, R2, S1, S2.
Note Bank Nifty's opening price. Go to NiftyZone Gann S9 Calculator and enter the opening price. Note R1, R2, S1, S2 from Gann as well.
Look for levels where Gann and Pivot are close to each other (within 50–100 points). These confluence zones are very strong support/resistance areas.
F&O stands for Futures and Options. Every contract has an expiry date — the last day it can be traded.
In India on NSE: