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Technical Analysis (General News)

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2011 10:58 pm
by iam802
John Murphy's Ten Laws of Technical Trading

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2005/05/jo ... ing/print/

StockCharts.com Chief Technical Analyst, John Murphy [1], has created another set of trading rules: "Ten Laws of Technical Trading:"
Posted By Barry Ritholtz



"Which way is the market moving? How far up or down will it go? And when will it go the other way? These are the basic concerns of the technical analyst. Behind the charts and graphs and mathematical formulas used to analyze market trends are some basic concepts that apply to most of the theories employed by today's technical analysts."

The following are John's ten most important rules of technical trading:

Map the Trends
Spot the Trend and Go With It
Find the Low and High of It
Know How Far to Backtrack
Draw the Line
Follow That Average
Learn the Turns
Know the Warning Signs
Trend or Not a Trend?
Know the Confirming Signs

Note: All of the following is the work of John Murphy (not me)


1. Map the Trends

Study long-term charts. Begin a chart analysis with monthly and weekly charts spanning several years. A larger scale "map of the market" provides more visibility and a better long-term perspective on a market. Once the long-term has been established, then consult daily and intra-day charts.

A short-term market view alone can often be deceptive. Even if you only trade the very short term, you will do better if you’re trading in the same direction as the intermediate and longer term trends.


2. Spot the Trend and Go With It

Determine the trend and follow it. Market trends come in many sizes long term, intermediate-term and short-term.

First, determine which one you are going to trade and use the appropriate chart. Make sure you trade in the direction of that trend. Buy dips if the trend is up.

Sell rallies if the trend is down. If you're trading the intermediate trend, use daily and weekly charts. If you're day trading, use daily and intra-day charts. But in each case, let the longer range chart determine the trend, and then use the shorter term chart for timing.


3. Find the Low and High of It

Find support and resistance levels. The best place to buy a market is near support levels. That support is usually a previous reaction low. The best place to sell a market is near resistance levels. Resistance is usually a previous peak.

After a resistance peak has been broken, it will usually provide support on subsequent pullbacks. In other words, the old "high" becomes the new "low." In the same way, when a support level has been broken, it will usually produce selling on subsequent rallies the old "low" can become the new "high."


4. Know How Far to Backtrack

Measure percentage retracements. Market corrections up or down usually retrace a significant portion of the previous trend. You can measure the corrections in an existing trend in simple percentages. A fifty percent retracement of a prior trend is most common.

A minimum retracement is usually one-third of the prior trend. The maximum retracement is usually two-thirds. Fibonacci retracements of 38% and 62% are also worth watching. During a pullback in an uptrend, therefore, initial buy points are in the 33 38% retracement area.


5. Draw the Line

Draw trend lines. Trend lines are one of the simplest and most effective charting tools. All you need is a straight edge and two points on the chart. Up trend lines are drawn along two successive lows. Down trend lines are drawn along two successive peaks. Prices will often pull back to trend lines before resuming their trend.

The breaking of trend lines usually signals a change in trend. A valid trend line should be touched at least three times. The longer a trend line has been in effect, and the more times it has been tested, the more important it becomes.


6. Follow that Average

Follow moving averages. Moving averages provide objective buy and sell signals. They tell you if existing trend is still in motion and help confirm a trend change. Moving averages do not tell you in advance, however, that a trend change is imminent. A combination chart of two moving averages is the most popular way of finding trading signals. Some popular futures combinations are 4- and 9-day moving averages, 9- and 18-day, 5- and 20 day.

Signals are given when the shorter average line crosses the longer. Price crossings above and below a 40-day moving average also provide good trading signals. Since moving average chart lines are trend-following indicators, they work best in a trending market.


7. Learn the Turns

Track oscillators. Oscillators help identify overbought and oversold markets. While moving averages offer confirmation of a market trend change, oscillators often help warn us in advance that a market has rallied or fallen too far and will soon turn. Two of the most popular are the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and Stochastics. They both work on a scale of 0 to 100. With the RSI, readings over 70 are overbought while readings below 30 are oversold.

The overbought and oversold values for Stochastics are 80 and 20. Most traders use 14-days or weeks for stochastics and either 9 or 14 days or weeks for RSI. Oscillator divergences often warn of market turns. These tools work best in a trading market range. Weekly signals can be used as filters on daily signals. Daily signals can be used as filters for intra-day charts.


8. Know the Warning Signs

Trade MACD. The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator (developed by Gerald Appel) combines a moving average crossover system with the overbought/oversold elements of an oscillator. A buy signal occurs when the faster line crosses above the slower and both lines are below zero. A sell signal takes place when the faster line crosses below the slower from above the zero line.

Weekly signals take precedence over daily signals. An MACD histogram plots the difference between the two lines and gives even earlier warnings of trend changes. It's called a "histogram" because vertical bars are used to show the difference between the two lines on the chart.


9. Trend or Not a Trend

Use ADX. The Average Directional Movement Index (ADX) line helps determine whether a market is in a trending or a trading phase. It measures the degree of trend or direction in the market. A rising ADX line suggests the presence of a strong trend.

A falling ADX line suggests the presence of a trading market and the absence of a trend. A rising ADX line favors moving averages; a falling ADX favors oscillators.

By plotting the direction of the ADX line, the trader is able to determine which trading style and which set of indicators are most suitable for the current market environment.


10. Know the Confirming Signs

Include volume and open interest. Volume and open interest are important confirming indicators in futures markets. Volume precedes price. It's important to ensure that heavier volume is taking place in the direction of the prevailing trend. In an uptrend, heavier volume should be seen on up days. Rising open interest confirms that new money is supporting the prevailing trend.

Declining open interest is often a warning that the trend is near completion. A solid price uptrend should be accompanied by rising volume and rising open interest.

"11."

Technical analysis is a skill that improves with experience and study. Always be a student and keep learning.

- John Murphy


Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Fri Apr 08, 2011 11:02 pm
by kennynah
when i started the US Market thread...I originally made it a Technical Discussion thread...but W correctly changed this into a generic discussion thread on US Market direction...

so, it's very good you start one on TA.... as long as we don't get into the discussion on whether TA is good or bad or superior to other forms of analysis..

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Fri Aug 12, 2011 9:14 am
by LenaHuat
Last night, CNN played this. This morning, it was still at it:
Charting the market madness, by hand

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Sat Oct 01, 2011 7:53 am
by winston
Lessons from seven weeks of stock market chop by PeterLBrandton

For those of you who wish to gain knowledge in classical charting principles, the choppiness of the past seven weeks in the U.S.stock market indexes offers some excellent lessons.

Let me meander through these lessons, not necessarily in a sequential order.

http://peterlbrandt.com/lessons-from-se ... rket-chop/

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 8:02 am
by winston
Three Basic Technical Analysis Measures I Like …
byb Nilus Mattive

Technical Analysis Technique #1: Trendlines

Technical Analysis Technique #2: The Moving Average

Technical Analysis Technique #3: Support and Resistance Levels


http://www.yolohub.com/trading/three-ba ... -%e2%80%a6

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2011 8:14 pm
by winston
"Can I be honest with you?" By Shah Gilani

Technical analysis is not a matter of random hash marks on a graph, accompanied by lines with circles and arrows.

Where do you think those marks on that graph came from?

Technical analysis is all about psychology. It’s a reflection of investor activity and the mindset that accompanies it.

The marks on a bar graph reflect the high and low prices of that day. There can also be little marks on each vertical line that show the opening price and the closing price, too.

When you string a lot of daily prices together on a graph, it is exactly what happened when investors and traders (we’re all traders now, I’m just appeasing you out there who don’t know it, or are fighting it) bought and sold whatever instrument you’re looking at.

What you may not realize is that things like “support” and “resistance” (to name the most often cited technical analysis tools, though there are many other excellent ones) are places where traders made actual decisions with their money.

A support line, for example, reflects where a stock, an index, a commodity (it doesn’t matter) experienced buying interest. T

he instrument was going down and stopped declining, because buyers stepped in, and selling abated. A resistance line would reflect the opposite.

That means that people actually took a position at that juncture.

In the case of support, buyers stepped in and maybe short sellers stepped to the sidelines. Then the instrument rises in price.

Maybe it comes back to that support level a few times (the more times an instrument touches its support or resistance levels, the more important those levels become) and each time buyers again step in the instrument goes higher, again.

If you think that technical analysis is mumbo-jumbo, think again.

http://moneymorning.com/2011/11/23/can- ... -with-you/

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Sat Dec 03, 2011 9:28 pm
by winston
SG: In a general sense, could you describe your trading strategies? What are some of the indicators you look for to make sure you're timing the trade correctly?

Jeff Clark: I follow several dozen technical indicators. They shift in and out of favor all the time. So I'm constantly adjusting my focus to find the indicators that track the market best under current conditions. What works today may not work tomorrow. So you have to be careful not to get locked in on any one strategy.

Having said that, one indicator that is working well at pointing to extreme conditions that may lead to a reversal in the overall stock market is plotting the S&P 500 against its 10-day exponential moving average (EMA).

The 10-day EMA works like a magnet for the S&P over the short term. Whenever the index strays too far from its 10-day EMA, it reverses and trends back toward the line. We've seen a lot of 50-point spreads between the S&P and its 10-day EMA lately… and that has set up a lot of good contrarian trades.

It also helps to watch the action in some of the more "macro" type indicators, like copper or the U.S. dollar. There's a fairly strong recent correlation between the action in stocks and the action in both copper and the dollar. Watching both of those will give you a good look at the bigger picture.

www.growthstockwire.com

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Sun Dec 04, 2011 12:30 am
by kennynah
what technical indicators do you use?

i use a few but not all are given equal weightage..

bollinger bands
ema with 22,50,200 parameters
macd

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Sun Dec 04, 2011 1:09 pm
by Chinaman
sifu bro k, teach me leh...what is 'macd'?

i used to see this in 'Nextchart' macd line going uptrend means good is it, hehe

Re: Technical Analysis

PostPosted: Sun Dec 04, 2011 11:03 pm
by kennynah
bro C.. i no sifu..far from it...

i understand macd as a indicator showing momentum...they form mountains and valleys... some trade using this indicator...they buy when the "mountain" is just forming, because they believe the momentum to the upside is just forming..and sell when the mountain starts to drop off, forming the "valley"...

Juicy Annie Kwan