3.introduction Technical Analysis
3.introduction Technical Analysis
Overview
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What is technical
analysis?
Technical analysis is the study of financial market
action. The technician looks at price changes that
occur on a day-to-day or week-to-week basis or over
any other constant time period displayed in graphic
form, called charts. Hence the name chart analysis.
Technical analysis is a tool, or method, used to predict
the probable future price movement of a security –
such as a stock or currency pair – based on market
data.
The theory behind the validity of technical analysis is
the notion that the collective actions – buying and
selling – of all the participants in the market
accurately reflect all relevant information pertaining
to a traded security, and therefore, continually assign a
fair market value to the security.
Financial Markets
Watching financial markets, it becomes
obvious that there are trends, momentum and
patterns that repeat over time, not exactly the
same way but similar. Charts are self-similar
as they show the same fractal structure (a
fractal is a tiny pattern; self-similar means the
overall pattern is made up of smaller versions
of the same pattern) whether in stocks,
commodities, currencies, bonds. A chart is a
mirror of the mood of the crowd and not of
the fundamental factors. Thus, technical
analysis is the analysis of human mass
psychology. Therefore, it is also called
behavioral finance.
Mood governs ratio
Know yourself and knowledge of the stock market will soon
follow. Ego and emotions determine far more of investors´ stock
market decisions than most would be willing to admit. For years,
we have dealt with professional money managers and committees
and found they were as much subject to crowd following and other
irrational emotional mistakes as any novice investor. They were,
for the most part, better informed, but facts alone are not enough to
make profitable decisions. The human element, which encompasses
a range of emotions from fear to greed, plays a much bigger role in
the decision-making process than most investors realize. In a
practical sense, most investors act exactly opposite to the rational
wisdom of buying low and selling high based on very predictable
emotional responses to rising or falling prices. Falling prices that at
first appear to be bargains generate fear of loss at much lower
prices when opportunities are the greatest. Rising prices that at first
appear to be good opportunities to sell ultimately lead to greed
induced buying at much higher levels. Reason is replaced by
emotion and rationalization with such cyclical regularity, that those
who recognize the symptoms and the trend changes on the charts
can profit very well from this knowledge. Investors who manage to
act opposite to the mood of the crowd and against their own
emotions are best positioned to earn money in the financial
markets. Financial risk and emotional risk correlate inversely.
Two Main
Type of
Charts
Bar charts One single bar/ Candlestick Patterns shows the high and the
low of the respective trading period. A vertical bar is used to
connect the high and the low. Horizontal lines are used to show
the opening price (left) of that specific trading period and the
closing price (right) at the end of the period. For example, on the
monthly chart, a bar indicates the high and the low at market
index is traded during that single day.
Line charts A line chart is the simplest of all methods. It is
constructed by joining together the closing price of
each period, for example daily closings for the daily
line chart, weekly closings for the weekly chart or
monthly closings for the daily line chart.
Support &
resistance Resistance lines are horizontal lines that start at a recent
extreme price peak with the line pointing horizontally into the
future. Support lines are horizontal lines that start at a recent
extreme of a correction low and also point toward the future
on the time axis. An uptrend continues as long as the most
recent peak is surpassed, and new peak levels are reached. A
downtrend continues as long as past lows are broken,
sustaining a series of lower lows and lower highs. A bearish
trend reversal occurs when the price breaks through the
most recent support after failing to rise above the most
recent resistance. A bullish trend reversal occurs when the
price penetrates the most recent resistance after holding
above the most recent support.
Trendlines