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Basics of Technical Analysis |
New to Trading and Technical Analysis?
Learn the Basics of Technical Analysis of
Indian Stocks and Stock Market Trend Stock
Charts and Trends.
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Stock Charts |
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| Stock
charts gained popularity in the
late 19th Century from the
writings of Charles H. Dow in
the Wall Street Journal. His
comments, later known as "Dow
Theory", alleged that markets
move in all kinds of measurable
trends and that these trends
could be deciphered and
predicted in the price movement
seen on all charts.
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS seeks
to determine future stock price
by understanding and measuring
the objective "value" of an
equity. The study of stock
charts, known as TECHNICAL
ANALYSIS, believes that the past
action of the market itself will
determine the future course of
prices.
A stock chart is a simple
two-axis (x-y) plotted graph of
price and time. Each
individual equity, market and
index listed on a public
exchange has a chart that
illustrates this movement of
price over time. Individual data
plots for charts can be made
using the CLOSING price for each
day. The plots are connected
together in a single line,
creating the graph. Also, a
combination of the OPENING,
CLOSING, HIGH and/or LOW prices
for that market session can be
used for the data plots. This
second type of data is called a
PRICE BAR. Individual price bars
are then overlaid onto the
graph, creating a dense visual
display of stock movement.
Stock charts can be
created in many different time
frames. Mutual fund holders
use monthly charts in which each
individual data plot consists of
a single month of activity. Day
traders use 1 minute and 5
minute stock charts to make
quick buy and sell decisions.
The most common type of stock
chart is the daily plot, showing
a single complete market session
for each unit.
Stock charts can be drawn
in two different ways. An
ARITHMETIC chart has equal
vertical distances between each
unit of price. A LOGARITHMIC
chart is a percentage growth
chart. It has equal vertical
distances between the same
percentages of price growth. For
example, a price movement from
10 to 20 is a 100% move. A move
from 20 to 40 is also a 100%
move. For this reason, the
vertical distance from 10 to 20
and the vertical distance from
20 to 40 will be identical on a
logarithmic chart.
Stock chart analysis can
be applied equally to individual
stocks and major indices.
Analysts use their technical
research on index charts to
decide whether the current
market is a BULL MARKET or a
BEAR MARKET. On individual
charts, investors and traders
can learn the same thing about
their favorite companies.
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Trends |
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| Use
the stock chart to identify the
current trend. A trend
reflects the average rate of
change in a stock's price over
time. Trends exist in all time
frames and all markets. Day
traders can establish the trend
of their stocks to within
minutes. Long term investors
watch trends that persist for
many years.
Trends can be classified
in three ways: UP, DOWN or
RANGEBOUND.
In an uptrend, a stock
rallies often with intermediate
periods of consolidation or
movement against the trend. In
doing so, it draws a series of
higher highs and higher lows on
the stock chart. In an uptrend,
there will be a POSITIVE rate of
price change over time.
In a downtrend, a
stock declines often with
intermediate periods of
consolidation or movement
against the trend. In doing so,
it draws a series of lower highs
and lower lows on the stock
chart. In a downtrend, there
will be a NEGATIVE rate of price
change over time.
Rangebound price swings
back and forth for long
periods between easily seen
upper and lower limits. There is
no apparent direction to the
price movement on the stock
chart and there will be LITTLE
or NO rate of price change.
Trends tend to persist
over time. A stock in an
uptrend will continue to rise
until some change in value or
conditions occurs. Declining
stocks will continue to fall
until some change in value or
conditions occurs. Chart readers
try to locate TOPS and BOTTOMS,
which are those points where a
rally or a decline ends. Taking
a position near a top or a
bottom can be very profitable.
Trends can be measured
using TRENDLINES. Very often
a straight line can be drawn
UNDER three or more pullbacks
from rallies or OVER pullbacks
from declines. When price bars
then return to that trendline,
they tend to find SUPPORT or
RESISTANCE and bounce off the
line in the opposite direction.
A famous quote about
trends advises that "The trend
is your friend". For traders
and investors, this wisdom
teaches that you will have more
success taking stock positions
in the direction of the
prevailing trend than against
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Volume |
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Volume measures the
participation of the crowd.
Stock charts display volume
through individual HISTOGRAMS
below the price pane. Often
these will show green bars for
up days and red bars for down
days. Investors and traders can
measure buying and selling
interest by watching how many up
or down days in a row occur and
how their volume compares with
days in which price moves in the
opposite direction.
Stocks that are bought
with greater interest than sold
are said to be under
ACCUMULATION. Stocks that
are sold with great interest
than bought are said to be under
DISTRIBUTION. Accumulation and
distribution often LEAD price
movement. In other words, stocks
under accumulation often will
rise some time after the buying
begins. Alternatively, stocks
under distribution will often
fall some time after selling
begins.
It takes volume for a
stock to rise but it can fall of
its own weight. Rallies
require the enthusiastic
participation of the crowd. When
a rally runs out of new
participants, a stock can easily
fall. Investors and traders use
indicators such as ON BALANCE
VOLUME to see whether
participation is lagging
(behind) or leading (ahead) the
price action.
Stocks trade daily with an
average volume that determines
their LIQUIDITY. Liquid
stocks are very easy for traders
to buy and sell. Illiquid stocks
require very high SPREADS
(transaction costs) to buy or
sell and often cannot be
eliminated quickly from a
portfolio. Stock chart analysis
does not work well on illiquid
stocks.
Breakouts accompanied by
volume much higher than the
average for that stock are
healthy for the continuation of
the price movement in that
direction. But after long
rallies or declines, stocks
often have a day of very high
volume known as a CLIMAX. During
these days, the last of the
buyers or sellers take
positions. The stock then
reverses as there are no longer
enough participants to cause
price to move in that direction.
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Patterns and Indicators |
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| How
can you organize the endless
stream of stock chart data into
a logical format that
doesn't require rocket science
to interpret? Charts allow
investors and traders to look at
past and present price action in
order to make reasonable
predictions and wise choices. It
is a highly visual medium. This
one fact separates it from the
colder world of value-based
analysis.
The stock chart activates
both left-brain and right-brain
functions of logic and
creativity. So it's no
surprise that over the last
century two forms of analysis
have developed that focus along
these lines of critical
examination.
The oldest form of
interpreting charts is PATTERN
ANALYSIS. This method gained
popularity through both the
writings of Charles Dow and
Technical Analysis of Stock
Trends, a classic book
written on the subject just
after World War II. The newer
form of interpretation is
INDICATOR ANALYSIS, a
math-oriented examination in
which the basic elements of
price and volume are run through
a series of calculations in
order to predict where price
will go next.
Pattern analysis gains its
power from the tendency of
charts to repeat the same bar
formations over and over again.
These patterns have been
categorized over the years as
having a bullish or bearish
bias. Some well-known ones
include HEAD and SHOULDERS,
TRIANGLES, RECTANGLES, DOUBLE
TOPS, DOUBLE BOTTOMS and FLAGS.
Also, chart landscape features
such as GAPS and TRENDLINES are
said to have great significance
on the future course of price
action.
Indicator analysis uses
math calculations to measure the
relationship of current price to
past price action. Almost
all indicators can be
categorized as TREND-FOLLOWING
or OSCILLATORS. Popular
trend-following indicators
include MOVING AVERAGES, ON
BALANCE VOLUME and MACD. Common
oscillators include STOCHASTICS,
RSI and RATE OF CHANGE.
Trend-following indicators react
much more slowly than
oscillators. They look deeply
into the rear view mirror to
locate the future. Oscillators
react very quickly to short-term
changes in price, flipping back
and forth between OVERBOUGHT and
OVERSOLD levels.
Both patterns and
indicators measure market
psychology. The core of
investors and traders that make
up the market each day tend to
act with a herd mentality as
price rises and falls. This
"crowd" tends to develop known
characteristics that repeat
themselves over and over again.
Chart interpretation using these
two important analysis tools
uncovers growing stress within
the crowd that should eventually
translate into price change.
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Moving Averages |
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| The
most popular technical indicator
for studying stock charts is the
MOVING AVERAGE. This
versatile tool has many
important uses for investors and
traders.
Take the sum of any number
of previous CLOSE prices and
then divide it by that same
number. This creates an
average price for that stock in
that period of time. A moving
average can be displayed by
recomputing this result daily
and plotting it in the same
graphic pane as the price bars.
Moving averages LAG price. In
other words, if price starts to
move sharply upward or downward,
it will take some time for the
moving average to "catch up".
Plotting moving averages
in stock charts reveals how well
current price is behaving as
compared to the past. The
power of the moving average line
comes from its direct
interaction with the price bars.
Current price will always be
above or below any moving
average computation. When it is
above, conditions are "bullish".
When below, conditions are
"bearish". Additionally, moving
averages will slope upward or
downward over time. This adds
another visual dimension to a
stock analysis.
Moving averages define
STOCK TRENDS. They can be
computed for any period of time.
Investors and traders find them
most helpful when they provide
input about the SHORT-TERM,
INTERMEDIATE and LONG-TERM
trends. For this reason, using
multiple moving averages that
reflect these characteristics
assist important decision
making. Common moving average
settings for daily stock charts
are: 20 days for short-term, 50
days for intermediate and 200
days for long-term.
One of the most common buy
or sell signals in all chart
analysis is the MOVING AVERAGE
CROSSOVER. These occur when
two moving averages representing
different trends criss-cross.
For example, when a short-term
average crosses BELOW a
long-term one, a SELL signal is
generated. Conversely, when a
short-term crosses ABOVE the
long-term, a BUY signal is
generated.
Moving averages can be
"speeded up" through the
application of further math
calculations. Common
averages are known as SIMPLE or
SMA. These tend to be very slow.
By giving more weight to the
current changes in price rather
than those many bars ago, a
faster EXPONENTIAL or EMA moving
average can be created. Many
technicians favor the EMA over
the SMA. Fortunately all common
stock chart programs, online and
offline, do the difficult moving
average calculations for you and
plot price perfectly.
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Support and Resistance |
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| The
concept of SUPPORT AND
RESISTANCE is essential to
understanding and interpreting
stock charts. Just as a ball
bounces when it hits the floor
or drops after being thrown to
the ceiling, support and
resistance define natural
boundaries for rising and
falling prices.
Buyers and sellers are
constantly in battle mode.
Support defines that level where
buyers are strong enough to keep
price from falling further.
Resistance defines that level
where sellers are too strong to
allow price to rise further.
Support and resistance play
different roles in uptrends and
downtrends. In an uptrend,
support is where a pullback from
a rally should end. In a
downtrend, resistance is where a
pullback from a decline should
end.
Support and resistance are
created because price has
memory. Those prices where
significant buyers or sellers
entered the market in the past
will tend to generate a similar
mix of participants when price
again returns to that level.
When price pushes above
resistance, it becomes a new
support level. When price
falls below support, that level
becomes resistance. When a level
of support or resistance is
penetrated, price tends to
thrust forward sharply as the
crowd notices the BREAKOUT and
jumps in to buy or sell. When a
level is penetrated but does not
attract a crowd of buyers or
sellers, it often falls back
below the old support or
resistance. This failure is
known as a FALSE BREAKOUT.
Support and resistance
come in all varieties and
strengths. They most often
manifest as horizontal price
levels. But trendlines at
various angles represent support
and resistance as well. The
length of time that a support or
resistance level exists
determines the strength or
weakness of that level. The
strength or weakness determines
how much buying or selling
interest will be required to
break the level. Also, the
greater volume traded at any
level, the stronger that level
will be.
Support and resistance
exist in all time frames and
all markets. Levels in longer
time frames are stronger than
those in shorter time frames.
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New to Trading and Technical Analysis?
Learn the Basics of Technical Analysis of
Indian Stocks and Stock Market Trend Stock
Charts and Trends.
|
|
|
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