Technical
Analysis Part One
Article About The Art And Science Of Examining Stock
Chart Data
Technical analysis is the art and science of examining stock chart
data and predicting future moves on the stock market. Investors who
use this style of analysis are often unconcerned about the nature
or value of the companies they trade stocks in. Their holdings are
usually short-term – once their projected profit is reached they
drop the stock.
The basis for technical analysis is the belief that stock prices
move in predictable patterns. All the factors that influence price
movement – company performance, the general state of the economy,
natural disasters – are supposedly reflected in the stock market
with great efficiency. This efficiency, coupled with historical
trends produces movements that can be analyzed and applied to
future stock market movements.
Technical analysis is not intended for long-term investments
because fundamental information concerning a company's potential
for growth is not taken into account. Trades must be entered and
exited at precise times, so technical analysts need to spend a
great deal of time watching market movements.
Investors can take advantage of both upswings and downswings in
price by going either long or short. Stop-loss orders limit losses
in the event that the market does not move as expected.
There are many tools available to the technical analyst. Literally
hundreds of stock patterns have been developed
over time. Most of them, however, rely on the basic concepts of
'support' and 'resistance'. Support is the level
that downward prices are expected to rise from, and
Resistance is the level that upward prices are
expected to reach before falling again. In other words, prices tend
to bounce once they have hit support or resistance levels.
Charts
Technical analysis relies heavily on charts for tracking market
movements. Bar charts are the most commonly used.
They consist of vertical bars representing a particular time period
– weekly, daily, hourly, or even by the minute. The top of each bar
shows the highest price for the period, the bottom is the lowest
price, and the small bar to the left is the opening price and
the small bar to the right is the closing price. A great deal
of information can be seen in glancing at bar charts. Long bars
indicate a large price spread and the position of the side bars
shows whether the price rose or dropped and also the spread between
opening and closing prices.
A variation on the bar chart is the candlestick
chart. These charts use solid bodies to indicate the
variation between opening and closing prices and the lines
(shadows) that extend above and below the body indicate the highest
and lowest prices respectively. Candlestick bodies are coloured
black or red if the closing price was lower than the previous
period or white or green if the price closed higher. Candlesticks
form various shapes that can indicate market movement. A green body
with short shadows is bullish – the stock opened near its low and
closed near its high. Conversely, a red body with short shadows is
bearish – the stock opened near the high and closed near the low.
These are only two of the more than 20 patterns that can be formed
by candlesticks.
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