Sunday, September 22, 2013

Concepts of Technical Analysis

Resistance 


Resistance is the price level at which selling is thought to be strong enough to prevent the price from rising further. A resistance level is the opposite of a support level. It is where the price tends to find resistance as it is going up. 


If the market was up on a given day, a common interpretation is there were more buyers than sellers, pushing prices higher. However, every buy has a matching sell and every sell has a matching buy. So how can we make sense of “more buyers than sellers”? It is not really the number of buyers or sellers, but rather their level of aggressiveness in reaching an acceptable price level. 

If buyers aggressively bid on stocks, the price will increase, even though the number of buyers and sellers are equal. If buyers are willing to pay higher prices, prices go up. On the other hand, if sellers are more forceful in selling and will accept lower and lower prices as they sell, the forcefulness of the sellers will override the interest of the buyers, and prices will fall.


The logic dictates that as the price advances towards resistance, sellers become more inclined to sell and buyers become less inclined to buy. By the time the price reaches the resistance level, it is believed that supply will overcome demand and prevent the price from rising above resistance.
This means the price is more likely to "bounce" off this level rather than break through it. 


Support and resistance are price areas of a stock chart (or other security chart) which may indicate where a stock’s price may hesitate and continue sideways or where a price reversal may occur. Let’s look at each of these in more detail.

Support 

Support is the price level at which demand is thought to be strong enough to prevent the price from declining further. Support levels are areas defined by highs and lows within a stock's trading history. The true definition is an area of congestions or recent lows below the current market price.


A support level is a price level where the price tends to find support as it is going down. This means the price is more likely to "bounce" off this level rather than break through it. 


The logic dictates that as the price declines towards support and gets cheaper, buyers become more inclined to buy and sellers become less inclined to sell. By the time the price reaches the support level, it is believed that demand will overcome supply and prevent the price from falling below support.
However, once the price has passed this level, by an amount exceeding some noise, it is likely to continue dropping until it finds another support level.

Trend Line

Technical analysis is built on the assumption that prices trend. Trend Lines are an important tool in technical analysis for both trend identification and confirmation. 

Overall Trend: The first step is to identify the overall trend. This can be accomplished with trend lines, moving averages or peak/trough analysis. As long as the price remains above its uptrend line, selected moving averages or previous lows, the trend will be considered bullish.


Trend lines are a simple and widely used technical analysis approach to judging entry and exit investment timing. A trend line is a bounding line for the price movement of a security. A trend line is a straight line that connects two or more price points and then extends into the future to act as a line of support or resistance. 


A trend line is formed when a diagonal line can be drawn between two or more price pivot points. They are commonly used to judge entry and exit investment timing when trading securities.[1] It can also be referred to as a dutch line as it was first used in Holland.


A support trend line is formed when a securities price decreases and then rebounds at a pivot point that aligns with at least two previous support pivot points. Similarly a resistance trend line is formed when a securities price increases and then rebounds at a pivot point that aligns with at least two previous resistance pivot points.

Many of the principles applicable to support and resistance levels can be applied to trend lines as well. It is important that you understand all of the concepts presented in our Support and Resistance article before you continue. 
To establish a trend line historical data, typically presented in the format of a chart such as the above price chart, is required. Historically, trend lines have been drawn by hand on paper charts, but it is now more common to use charting software that enables trend lines to be drawn on computer based charts. There are some charting software that will automatically generate trend lines, however most traders prefer to draw their own trend lines.


When establishing trend lines it is important to choose a chart based on a price interval period that aligns with your trading strategy. Short term traders tend to use charts based on interval periods, such as 1 minute (i.e. the price of the security is plotted on the chart every 1 minute), with longer term traders using price charts based on hourly, daily, weekly and monthly interval periods.


Trend lines are typically used with price charts, however they can also be used with a range of technical analysis charts such as MACD and RSI. Trend lines can be used to identify positive and negative trending charts, whereby a positive trending chart forms an up sloping line when the support and the resistance pivots points are aligned, and a negative trending chart forms a down sloping line when the support and resistance pivot points are aligned.

Trend lines are used in many ways by traders. If a stock price is moving between support and resistance trend lines, then a basic investment strategy commonly used by traders, is to buy a stock at support and sell at resistance, then short at resistance and cover the short at support. The logic behind this, is that when the price returns to an existing principal trend line it may be an opportunity to open new positions in the direction of the trend, in the belief that the trend line will hold and the trend will continue further. A second way is that when price action breaks through the principal trend line of an existing trend, it is evidence that the trend may be going to fail, and a trader may consider trading in the opposite direction to the existing trend, or exiting positions in the direction of the trend.


Breakout

A price movement through an identified level of support or resistance, which is usually followed by heavy volume and increased volatility. 

A breakout is when prices pass through and stay through an area of support or resistance. On the technical analysis chart a break out occurs when price of a stock or commodity exits an area pattern. 


Traders will buy the underlying asset when the price breaks above a level of resistance and sell when it breaks below support. 


Market Trend 

Identifying trends is important. But how do you spot a trend? It's difficult, as the market never moves in a straight line. A stock will never fall continuously on a given day and rise on another. "Generally, higher highs and higher lows indicate an uptrend, whereas lower highs and lower lows mean a downtrend," says Shrikant Chouhan, senior vice president, technical research, Kotak Securities.

"Look at the trend. Look at news related to the stock," says Chouhan.
For example, if the rupee is falling against the US dollar, it's common knowledge that technology companies will gain.


A market trend is a tendency of a financial market to move in a particular direction over time.[1] These trends are classified as secular for long time frames, primary for medium time frames, and secondary for short time frames.[2] Traders identify market trends using technical analysis, a framework which characterizes market trends as predictable price tendencies within the market when price reaches support and resistance levels, varying over time.

The terms bull market and bear market describe upward and downward market trends, respectively,[3] and can be used to describe either the market as a whole or specific sectors and securities.[2]


Analysts and market experts take the help of various parameters to confirm if a stock is a trade pick. The most used are available in any technical analysis software. These include 200-day moving average, relative strength index, moving average convergence divergence, or MACD, Fibonacci retracement and candle stick price chart. The terms may sound daunting, but software available nowadays makes technical analysis easy.


You'v­e seen movies in which frantic stock traders are buying a thousand shares of a hot stock or dumping shares of a plummeting stock. You've seen commercials for brokerage firms that claim to have exciting prospects and strong portfolios. And you've probably heard a hundred different ways to predict the rise and fall of the stock market.


How do these traders and firms predict which shares will hit big? How do they know when to sell?


The truth is there is no magical way to predict the stock market. Many issues affect rises and falls in share prices, whether gradual changes or sharp spikes. The best way to understand how the market fluctuates is to study trends.


In this article we will discuss stock market trends, which help investors identify what stocks to buy and when. Keeping track of upswings and downswings over the history of individual stocks, as well as being aware of market-wide trends, helps investors plan buying and selling.


Many­ factors affect prices in the stock market, including inflation, interest rates, energy prices, oil prices and international issues, such as war, crime, fraud and political unrest.


Sudden rises or drops in stock prices are often called spikes. Spikes are extremely difficult, if not impossible, to predict. Stock market trends are like the behavior of a person. After you study how a person reacts to different situations, you can make predictions about how that person will react to an event. Similarly, recognizing a trend in the stock market or in an individual stock will enable you to choose the best times to buy and sell.


Dead Cat Bounce

In finance, a dead cat bounce is a small, brief recovery in the price of a declining stock.[1] Derived from the idea that "even a dead cat will bounce if it falls from a great height", the phrase, which originated on Wall Street, is also popularly applied to any case where a subject experiences a brief resurgence during or following a severe decline.


Extremely volatile markets create an environment for the formation of a very specific type of technical price pattern. The “Dead Cat Bounce” pattern (DCB) may have a macabre name but it comes with very nice profit potential and is relatively easy to identify.


At its heart the DCB is a great study in investor psychology. It occurs when investors have panicked or have been caught by surprise which is why the pattern occurs most frequently in bearish and volatile markets.


Investor psychology comes into play because traders are likely to become fearful at the same price levels that they have been fearful before. We use the DCB to identify those price levels for potential breakouts.


The pattern consists of a gap during a downtrend when prices have moved between the close of one day and the open of the next trading day. The larger the gap is the more significance technicians will assign to the pattern. The gap is typically created by unexpected news appearing after or before normal market hours.


The gaps indicates that traders have “overreacted” to the data, the stock is likely to become oversold at some point and will begin to retrace back towards the gap. The top and bottom of the gap will act as resistance barriers and if the market or stock peels off of these resistance levels, the subsequent decline can be quite significant.

The rally back towards the gap is a good example of a bull trap and the final decline that completes the pattern can be larges and fast as a feedback loop of stop losses push more sellers into the market.


Elliot Wave Principle

The Elliott wave principle is a form of technical analysis that some traders use to analyze financial market cycles and forecast market trends by identifying extremes in investor psychology, highs and lows in prices, and other collective factors. 

Ralph Nelson Elliott (1871–1948), a professional accountant, discovered the underlying social principles and developed the analytical tools in the 1930s. He proposed that market prices unfold in specific patterns, which practitioners today call Elliott waves, or simply waves. Elliott published his theory of market behavior in the book The Wave Principle in 1938, summarized it in a series of articles in Financial World magazine in 1939, and covered it most comprehensively in his final major work, Nature’s Laws: The Secret of the Universe in 1946. 


Elliott stated that "because man is subject to rhythmical procedure, calculations having to do with his activities can be projected far into the future with a justification and certainty heretofore unattainable." [1] The empirical validity of the Elliott Wave Principle remains the subject of debate.


Fibonacci Retracements


In finance, Fibonacci retracements is a method of technical analysis for determining support and resistance levels. They are named after their use of the Fibonacci sequence. Fibonacci retracement is based on the idea that markets will retrace a predictable portion of a move, after which they will continue to move in the original direction.


The appearance of retracement can be ascribed to ordinary price volatility as described by Burton Malkiel, a Princeton economist in his book A Random Walk Down Wall Street, who found no reliable predictions in technical analysis methods taken as a whole. Malkiel argues that asset prices typically exhibit signs of random walk and that one cannot consistently outperform market averages. Fibonacci retracement is created by taking two extreme points on a chart and dividing the vertical distance by the key Fibonacci ratios. 0.0% is considered to be the start of the retracement, while 100.0% is a complete reversal to the original part of the move. Once these levels are identified, horizontal lines are drawn and used to identify possible support and resistance levels.


Pivot point

A pivot point is a price level of significance in technical analysis of a financial market that is used by traders as a predictive indicator of market movement. 

A pivot point is calculated as an average of significant prices (high, low, close) from the performance of a market in the prior trading period. If the market in the following period trades above the pivot point it is usually evaluated as a bullish sentiment, whereas trading below the pivot point is seen as bearish.
Monthly pivot point chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average for the first 8 months of 2009, showing sets of first and second levels of resistance (green) and support (red). The pivot point levels are highlighted in yellow. Trading below the pivot point, particularly at the beginning of a trading period sets a bearish market sentiment and often results in further price decline, while trading above it, bullish price action may continue for some time.
It is customary to calculate additional levels of support and resistance, below and above the pivot point, respectively, by subtracting or adding price differentials calculated from previous trading ranges of the market.


A pivot point and the associated support and resistance levels are often turning points for the direction of price movement in a market. In an up-trending market, the pivot point and the resistance levels may represent a ceiling level in price above which the uptrend is no longer sustainable and a reversal may occur. In a declining market, a pivot point and the support levels may represent a low price level of stability or a resistance to further decline.[1]


Dow Theory

The Dow theory on stock price movement is a form of technical analysis that includes some aspects of sector rotation. The theory was derived from 255 Wall Street Journal editorials written by Charles H. Dow (1851–1902), journalist, founder and first editor of the Wall Street Journal and co-founder of Dow Jones and Company. Following Dow's death, William Peter Hamilton, Robert Rhea and E. George Schaefer organized and collectively represented Dow theory, based on Dow's editorials. Dow himself never used the term Dow theory nor presented it as a trading system.


Average true range


Average true range (ATR) is a technical analysis volatility indicator originally developed by J. Welles Wilder, Jr. for commodities.[1] The indicator does not provide an indication of price trend, simply the degree of price volatility.[2][3] The average true range is an N-day exponential moving average of the true range values. Wilder recommended a 14-period smoothing.[4]


Chart pattern

A Price pattern is a pattern that is formed within a chart when prices are graphed. In stock and commodity markets trading, chart pattern studies play a large role during technical analysis. When data is plotted there is usually a pattern which naturally occurs and repeats over a period. Chart patterns are used as either reversal or continuation signals.


Some people[who?] claim that by recognizing chart patterns they are able to predict future stock prices and profit by this prediction; other people respond by quoting "past performance is no guarantee of future results" and argue that chart patterns are merely illusions created by people's subconscious. Certain theories of economics hold that if there were a way to predict future stock prices and profit by it then when enough people used these techniques they would become ineffective and cease to be profitable. On the other hand, predicting what others will predict the market will do, would be valuable information.


Cycles


Stock market cycles are the long-term price patterns of the stock market.


Momentum

Momentum: Momentum is usually measured with an oscillator such as MACD. If MACD is above its 9-day EMA (exponential moving average) or positive, then momentum will be considered bullish, or at least improving.
Momentum and rate of change (ROC) are simple technical analysis indicators showing the difference between today's closing price and the close N days ago. Momentum is the absolute difference in stock, commodity:


Rate of change scales by the old close, so as to represent the increase as a fraction,



"Momentum" in general refers to prices continuing to trend. The momentum and ROC indicators show trend by remaining positive while an uptrend is sustained, or negative while a downtrend is sustained.

A crossing up through zero may be used as a signal to buy, or a crossing down through zero as a signal to sell. How high (or how low when negative) the indicators get shows how strong the trend is.

The way momentum shows an absolute change means it shows for instance a $3 rise over 20 days, whereas ROC might show that as 0.25 for a 25% rise over the same period. One can choose between looking at a move in dollar terms, relative point terms, or proportional terms. The zero crossings are the same in each, of course, but the highs or lows showing strength are on the respective different bases.

The conventional interpretation is to use momentum as a trend-following indicator. This means that when the indicator peaks and begins to descend, it can be considered a sell signal. The opposite conditions can be interpreted when the indicator bottoms out and begins to rise.[1]


Point and Figure Analysis 

Point and figure (P&F) is a charting technique which provides a simple, yet disciplined method of identifying current or emerging trends in stock prices, used in technical analysis


Point and figure charting is unique in that it does not plot price against time as all other techniques do. Instead it plots price against changes in direction by plotting a column of Xs as the price rises and a column of Os as the price falls.[citation needed]


This brief guide aims to familiarize the investor with the basic concepts behind p&f charts and highlights some of the benefits from using them in one’s investment procedure.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Basics of Technical Analysis

Technical Analysis Stock Trading
What is technical analysis in stock trading?


If you find yourself asking – what do I need to be successful in the stock market – the answer is technical analysis. It doesn’t matter if you’re a long-term investor or a short-term trader. Technical analysis will make you a better trader.


Technical analysis is the study of how the price of a share of stock or index is moving on a stock market chart. It usually involves the use of an indicator or oscillator to measure various aspects of price, including trends, price ranges, price and volume combinations, rate of change, etc. The idea for using technical analysis is that prices are not completely random, but rather, they follow price patterns.

If you look at a chart you'll see that daily prices for the most part, connect from day to day. The daily price of a stock has a relationship with the prior day’s action and so on. Even stocks with volatile price movements have a day-to-day relationship and subsequently, create a pattern of movement.

Every stock move is driven by one of three emotions:

Fear 
Greed 
Uncertainty

Uncertainty is the pit stop between fear and greed, the two most dominate emotions.


When the most dominant group of stock traders in a stock are being driven by greed, the stock will rise.....when the most dominant group of stock traders in a stock are being driven by fear, the stock will sink.....and when the most dominant group is uncertain, the stock will stabilize and the stock price will remain flat.


If we go a little deeper, technical analysis is also a way to read true trader sentiment about a stock because what makes the price of a stock go up or down is whether the majority of traders want to buy it or sell it. And so, price patterns are created when buyers and sellers react/respond to price action. 


Technical Analysis Stock Trading - Why? Know Where Price Is


A reason to use technical analysis stock trading is you should want to have, at least, some basic knowledge of what any stock’s price is doing before you buy it. Otherwise, if you have absolutely no knowledge of what price is doing – you’re basically buying in a vacuum. Most stock traders want the price to be moving in the right direction to capture a gain and that’s why technical analysis is so important.

Fundamentals Aren’t Enough

To put it in perspective, traditionally, there are two general ways to pick stocks. One is to use fundamentals or the financial numbers of a company. The idea in using fundamentals is to look for numbers based on growth or value that appear to tell a story of how the price of a share of stock would be expected to move.

To assume that a stock price must go up because of earnings, low valuation, etc. isn’t enough information to make really good trades. There’s example after example of stocks that have good fundamentals and aren’t increasing in price.

The way to be successful as an investor is to combine fundamental study with some kind of technical analysis stock trading. Using technical analysis, a stock trader is reading what the price is currently doing and making trading decisions based on more information than just fundamentals.

Human Psychology

As mentioned above, the way price is moving describes what the majority of people interested in the stock really think about it and where they think it’s going to go. If you really think about why the price of a stock goes up –it’s because people are buying it. So why do people buy a stock? There are a lot of reasons why, but does that truly matter? At the end of the day, what really matters is how the price is moving and that's how technical analysis stock trading comes into play.

And, the interesting thing is that human psychology repeats itself. If a stock is popular – like the popular kid in school – and people are buying it that will make its price go up.

If You Knew of A Way to Read Price Would You Use It to Your Advantage?

If you had a way to clearly understand that the price of stock was moving upward before making a decision to enter into a position wouldn’t you use it?

On the flip side, if you had a way to read that many people were exiting the position in the stock and driving the price down wouldn’t you want the opportunity to exit before you felt like you were the last shareholder?

By examining price action to determine which force is prevailing, stock technical analysis focuses directly on the bottom lines:

What is the price?
Where has it been?
Where is it going?



Stock analysis is more an art form than a science. As an art form, it is open to interpretation and each stock trader should use only that which suits their style and personality.Developing a technical style takes time, effort and dedication, and the rewards can be great! 

Additionally, many traders and investors use financial news stations to gather information to influence trading activity when price movement will tell you what it’s actually doing. Why not use an unbiased tool that offers the information you need at a glance using what is rather than what might be. 

Technical Analysis Stock Trading - How?

Basics Factors


Technical analysis is a method of analyzing a stock or company solely on statistics generated by market activity. This can include volume, historical prices, etc. Using these charts and patterns many can suggest and predict future activity. However, plain and simple, technical analysis is only based on three assumptions.

1. The market discounts everything.
2. Prices move in trends
3. History always tends to repeat itself.


The Market Discounts Everything - 

One major critic about technical analysis is the fact it only takes into consideration price movement. Analysts looking for technical indicators ignore fundamental factors. The way they get around is by the theory that at any given time, a stocks share price will reflect everything that could possibly affect a company. This includes the effects brought on by fundamental factors. Since these factors are already priced into the stock, they believe all that matters is the analysis of price movement, which basically is the supply and demand of a stock.

Prices Move in Trends - 

This basically means that the price movements will follow similar patterns. It all comes down to assumption and the analyst assumes that the trends will follow on a similar pattern.

History Always Tend to Repeat Itself - 

The market repeats itself in its patterns of price movements. Analyzing charts for the past 100 years you can see everything follows a similar pattern so a could technical analyst will be able to read when the next trend is coming.
Here are some easy ways to use technical analysis in your trading with one or two applicable indicators:

Trend - Look to see if the stock price is in a trend? Is it going up or down? Is it a newly established trend or a stale one? (Indicators:Moving Average [MA], Average Directional Index [ADX], MACD)

There are three types of trends: Long-Term Trends, Medium-Term Trends, and Short-Term Trends.


The Long-term trend is over a year, the Medium-term trend is one to three months, and short-term is less than a month. If you are a long-term investor all you should worry about is the Long-term trend. If you look its a recipocal cycle for the stock to fluctuate with ups and downs, however long-term companies usually all go up as seen by the chart to the right. In this case the Super Trend is the Long Trend, the Dot com Bust is the medium trend and the small falls and gains in between are the small trend. Thats why long-term investors don’t look at their investments on a daily basis as due to fluctuations it doesn’t make sense. On the contrary if you trade regularly the Medium-term trend might be more critical. Remember the two most important sayings on trends: “the trend is your friend” and “don’t buck the trend.”


Support/Resistance – Look to see if the stock price headed toward a recent previous high or low in price? And how will the price act when it hits the same level as a recent high or low? Will the price move stop and reverse or break through? Or is the stock at a 52-week high or low and facing no resistance? (Indicators: Moving Average [MA], trend lines)

Support and Resistance can often be characterized as the on-going fight between the bulls and the bears or the struggle between supply and demand. This graph will help illustrate the difference: Support is the price level for which a stock or the market in general falls. Resistance is the price level it surpasses.


Are you following along? Well read carefully as support and resistance levels are crucial factors involved within the markets. Simply they are the price levels at what traders/investors will buy or sell a stock at. When analyzing support and resistance price levels, round numbers come into play throughout a large amount of charts. Round numbers represent physiological turning points for a stock and become the price levels in which a stock plays off. Often traders/investors will purchase a stock at a price level that they don’t believe it will fall under. For example, Google support level could be $400 where whenever it reaches near that price level, investors buy large quantities. On the other hand, Google could have a resistance level of $500 where investors don’t believe it will continue to go up much further therefore selling off. So now that you know about the basics of support and resistance levels, lets analyze why it’s an important factor.

Support and resistance analysis is crucial for traders as if you can identify a important level of resistance that over time has never been broken you will most likely consider profit taking when it reaches near that level the next time as you believe it is unlikely the shares will exceed that level. They go side by side with trends, as normally a trend will conform to its support and resistance levels. One key tip to know when trading near support and resistance levels is never to place your order on the exact price. Due to increased volatility, when a stock price reaches this level there tend to be a high level of trading volume therefore you will most likely miss out. Therefore place your order a couple points above or under and all will be good.

Volume – Relates to interest in a stock. Abnormal volume can indicate abnormal buying or selling activity. (Chaikin Money Flow, OBV, Rate of Change [ROC])

Price patterns – supply & demand has the price gone up really fast with no pause? Or has the price movement “rested” and begun to continue in the trend direction? (Japanese Candlesticks, Cup with Handle)

Personally, the technical indicator I mainly use is ADX to find trending stocks then price (Japanese Candlesticks). Simple, and not overly complicated.

When deciding what technical analysis stock trading indicator you want to use think about what you are most interested in whether it be trend, support/resistance, etc. and what makes the most sense to you.

Additionally, a trader can use both fundamental and technical analysis together.

Follow The Money !

Technical analysis of stock market companies is also the art of following the flow of money.Stock market analysis is the examination of price past movements to forecast future price movements. 

Technical analysts believe that the current stock price fully reflects all information. Because all information is already reflected in the price, it represents fair value and should form the basis of analysis.

A technician believes that it is possible to identify with a trend and make money as the trend unfolds. Because stock analysis can be applied to many different time-frames, it is possible to spot both short-term and long-term trends.

Technical analysts are concerned with two things:

1. What is the current price?
2. What is the history of the price movement?

The price is the end result of the battle between the forces of supply and demand for the company's stock. The object of technical stock analysis, is to forecast the direction of the price.

Technical analysts consider the stock market to be 80% psychological and 20% logical.Fundamental analysts consider the stock market to be 20% psychological and 80% logical.

Psychological or logical may be open for debate, but there is no questioning the current price of a stock. The price set by the stock market reflects the sum knowledge of all participants.

And these participants have considered (discounted) everything under the sun and settled on a price to buy or sell. These are the forces of supply and demand at work.

Technical Analysis Stock Trading - Next Step?

The best thing to do is pick a handful of individual indicators and read about them. Start looking at them comparing the information they provide with how the price moved on a group of stock charts. A good book to get started with technical analysis is The Visual Investor: How to Spot Market Trends (Wiley Trading) (See all Investing Books) .

Some of the most used technical indicators are:
· Moving average
· MACD
· Stochastics
· RSI
· Average Directional Index (ADX)

There are many more specialized indicators, but the ones listed above are probably the most popular ones.Then look at the stocks you own or ones you’re considering to buy in a chart format with the indicators. Look at your most successful trades and see how the indicator behaved. Or, look at a group of the best stock market performers with various indicators enabled.

Remember, the first thing to look for in technical analysis stock trading is to look at how price is moving. If you asked me to pick one indicator as a starting point, I’d say look at moving averages – they’re very easy to understand and to begin to get a general sense of the study of how price is moving.

For example, open up a chart and add a 20-day simple moving average and 50-day simple moving average. Now look at the chart and ask these questions:

· Where is the last price of the stock in relation to the two MA lines?
· Is it above both lines? Between them or below both MA lines?
· Is the 20-day above the 50-day? Or, below?
· Has there been a recent crossover between two MA lines? Or, has there been recent price move over a MA?

In the example of Morgan Stanley (MS) above you can easily see the price first moved below the blue, 20-day moving average line. The price then moved below the red, 50-day moving average line and continued for the most part to stay below that line. The 20-day moving average line then also crossed below the 50-day moving average line.

If an investor was dollar cost averaging every month into this position, it would have been quite disappointing. One could have speculated all the way down on MS, but understanding technical analysis stock trading will put you "in the know" of what a stock's price is doing. Looking at these simple lines on any stock chart will give you immediate information about how the stock’s price is moving and the ability to make much better decisions for taking positions.

Tip: As you move forward you can set up a stock market screener for the stocks that present the setups you’re looking for to trade.

There are no rules here. Except the ones you set for your trading. One can be strictly a fundamental trader, a technical trader, or a fundamental with technical trader. It’s up to what your philosophy about the things affect the price of a stock. Just know that if you use some method of technical analysis with any fundamentally appropriate stock you can take your trading to the next level.

In the end, successful stock trading stands on three pillars:1. You need to analyze the battle between the bulls and the bears.
2. You need to practice good money mangement.
3. You need discipline to follow your trading system and avoid getting high in the markets.

Hidden Truths of Technical Analysis

Technical analysis is one of the oldest market disciplines, yet the majority of the investment and academic communities consider it, at best, a minor supplement to their own work. At worst, it is disparaged as tea-leaf reading or simply a self-fulfilling prophecy. Look at these two phrases. They suggest that the technical analyst divines the market from some mystical process. This could not be further from the truth.

Consider the fundamental analyst. This person relies on company reports, conversations with company insiders, and macro-economic research in relevant business sectors. All this is indispensable when determining if a company is viable and predicting how its business will fare in the future.

Now consider the source of all the raw data. Much of it is projection and conjecture. How can you rely solely on such raw data when earnings reports and other industry wide data will be subject to revisions?

Technical analysis looks at actual trades in which bulls and bears have put their money where their collective mouths are. There is no revision of data. There is no ambiguity. There is no mystical divining of the future. All market and stock selection is based on current, not past, price performance, the predictable behavior of market participants, and the dynamics between markets over time.

Trends exist. Information is slowly disseminated to the public in an imperfect manner, and as the public acts on the information, the markets move. They continue to move until either the last group has acted or an outside influence, such as news, ends the trend. Sounds a lot like physics, does it not? A body in motion tends to remain in motion.

Look at another aspect of the analysis. Behavior is a key component of the analysis. When similar market conditions occur, market participants react in similar ways. This is how the patterns and measurements within technical analysis are created.

For example, the market holds fairly steady as buyers and sellers adjust their portfolios to meet their specific investment criteria. A stock might trade from 50 to 52 for weeks in this way. Is the stock good? Is the company good? You do not know. All you know is that bulls and bears consider the stock to be fairly valued within a small range. A body at rest tends to stay at rest—physics again.

Now somebody comes into the market to buy a large block of stock. Why? Technical analysis does not know but more important, it does not care. All it needs to know is that money has flowed into the market and increased demand for the stock. Demand? That is straight from basic economics. If demand rises, the price must rise to induce sufficient supply (sellers) to come into the market and restore equilibrium. This does not sound very mystical, does it?

So, now that demand has increased, market activity picks up to provide supply. It also changes in character as people try to decipher what is happening. Here are the familiar concepts of fear and greed, both key determinants of human behavior. Some participants think that something has changed and the stock is now undervalued. It could be a new product or simply a decrease in the company's raw material inputs. Perhaps it is foreign capital coming into the stock. Or a shortage of the stock itself. Whatever the reason, some market participants know something, or think they know something, about improved prospects for the company and they buy. The market breaks out of the trading range, and as it does, more market participants act. The size and scope of their actions is often similar to the size and scope of their actions at other occasions in which the market has broken out of similar ranges. It can be measured and projected.

Technical analysis has an unfortunate name. Perhaps "price action analysis" or "supply, demand, and reaction analysis" might be better. In 1998, great strides were made between market technicians and the academic community in the emerging field of behavioral finance. Now there is a possible name to use.

One aspect of the technical discipline is explaining the difference between valuations and actual market prices. If a stock is worth 75 on paper based on discounted cash flows, projected growth, and overall economic conditions, why is it trading at 90? The difference is in the market's perceptions of the stock. People have pushed the stock up past its theoretical value. Technical analysis is perfectly suited to handle this. Because people's perceptions can change quickly, it is also perfectly suited to reacting equally as quickly. This type of reaction speed is impossible using fundamental analysis alone.

Do you scrap your fundamentals and rely exclusively on technicals? Absolutely not! Although there are scores of money managers and traders that are 100 percent technical and making a lot of money, you, the reader, are not interested in making technical analysis your sole investment discipline just yet.
At this stage, charts give you a clear picture of what your fundamental research is saying. Remember that the fundamentals describe the company. Technicals describe how the stock performs. You are buying stock, not companies.

An Introduction to Technical Analysis

Technical Analysis is a study of mass psychology. It is partly a science and partly an art.


Individual behavior is complex, diverse, and difficult to predict. Group behavior is primitive.Fundamentals, while important, do not help the stock trader assess risk and timing issues in the present and now.

This is where technical analysis documents, stock analysis and stock market charts outshine the fundamentals. However, both disciplines can be used to compliment each others strengths.

By definition, technical analysis is a way of forecasting price movements through trend analysis of price movements. Generally, there are a lot of technical indicators that are being used by technicians to determine a stocks's next move.


Technical analysis, by theory, doesn't care completely about what company it is or even its earnings reports. The stock market is driven by belief and expectations of investors. So basically, price charts reflect or show the investors sentiment on a certain stock. Through charting, you will be able to determine when and how you'd get in and out of a stock base from the trends that charts show.

Technical analysis is all about studying stock price graphs and a few momentum oscillators derived thereof. It is the forecasting of future financial price movements based on an examination of past price movements. It is a security analysis methodology for forecasting the direction of prices through the study of past market data, primarily price and volume.

It must be understood that technical studies are based entirely on prices and do not include balance sheets, P&L accounts (fundamental analysis), the assumption being that the markets are efficient and all possible price sensitive information is built into the price graph of a security / index.

Like weather forecasting, technical analysis does not result in absolute predictions about the future. Instead, technical analysis can help investors anticipate what is "likely" to happen to prices over time. Technical analysis uses a wide variety of charts that show price over time.

Behavioral economics and quantitative analysis use many of the same tools of technical analysis, which, being an aspect of active management, stands in contradiction to much of modern portfolio theory. The efficacy of both technical and fundamental analysis is disputed by the efficient-market hypothesis which states that stock market prices are essentially unpredictable.

One of the basic essential concepts of technical analysis are the support and resistance concept. Support means that based from the chart, stock prices does not go below this level. Meaning to say, there are less likely chances that a stock price would go below this level. But when it does, this is called a break below and this suggests that prices would continue to go lower until the next support.

On the other hand, the term resistance is the opposite of the support. Resistance resembles a ceiling of a certain stock's price. Just like the support, if it breaks out its resistance line, this now suggests prices would now go up from that level; the resistance line now becomes the support.

Personally, the indicators that I use are very basic like MACD, Stochastic Oscillator, RSI, and Volume. This should be enough to get you started to know when to get in and get out of a stock.


Therefore, technical analysis supports the efficient market theory as against the "random walk theory" which supports the belief that stocks can be bought / sold on random events like flipping a coin!!! Technical analysis is more dynamic as compared to fundamental analysis based on one simple argument - fundamental analysts depend on corporate events like quarterly results and special announcements like earnings guidance and policy changes in operations to generate a buy / sell recommendation. 

If fundamental analysis was the single most reliable indicator of trends, prices would predominantly fluctuate only 4 - 5 times a year - around quarterly results and special announcements like mergers and acquisitions etc!! Why would prices fluctuate almost daily? If the prices fluctuate ever so often, is there a way to forecast them? Yes according to technical analysis!!

Technical analysis is applicable to stocks, indices, commodities, futures or any tradable instrument where the price is influenced by the forces of supply and demand. Price refers to any combination of the open, high, low, or close for a given security over a specific time frame. The time frame can be based on intraday (1-minute, 5-minutes, 10-minutes, 15-minutes, 30-minutes or hourly), daily, weekly or monthly price data and last a few hours or many years. In addition, some technical analysts include volume or open interest figures with their study of price action.