| Technical analysis is for
peaks, bottoms, trends, patterns, and other factors affecting a
stock's price movement and then making a buy or sell decision based
on those factors. Fundamentally the basics of technical analysis
alter in the trends that are very common in the market. Therefore
as a trader one who is in the market have to analyse the market
trend firstly. The types of trend and trend classifications along
with drawing trend lines with the concerned information and channel
line and price levels help the trader the best outcome. Depending
upon your time horizon, you could use technical analysis on an intraday
basis (5-minute, 15 minute, hourly), weekly or monthly basis.
The system of evaluating securities by relying on
the hypothesis that market data, such as charts of price, volume,
and open interest, can help predict futures market trends, usually
short-term. Unlike fundamental analysis, the intrinsic value of
the security is not considered. Technical analysts believe that
they can accurately predict the future price of a stock by looking
at its historical prices and other trading variables. Technical
analysis assumes that market psychology influences trading in a
way that enables predicting when a stock will rise or fall. Many
technical analysts are also market timers, who believe that technical
analysis can be applied just as easily to the market as a whole
as to an individual stock.
Covering the latest developments in computer technology,
technical tools, and indicators, the content here features new material
on charting, inter-market relationships, stocks and stock rotation,
plus state-of-the-art examples and figures. From this data they
will get how to read charts to understanding indicators and the
crucial role technical analysis plays in investing, readers gain
a thorough and accessible overview of the field of technical analysis,
with a special emphasis on futures markets. Revised and expanded
for the demands of today's financial world, it is very essential
to know for anyone interested in tracking and analyzing market behaviour.
Technical analysis formation created by drawing a line connecting
a series of descending tops, descending bottoms, ascending tops
or ascending bottoms. Some technical analysts look for prices breaking
through trend lines on the belief that those stocks have broken
through a resistance level and are headed in a new direction.
The Basic Theories
Dow Theory
Dow Theory is the oldest one in technical analysis
based upon the performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and
transportation stock price averages. The theory says that the market
is in a basic upward trend if one of these averages advances above
a previous important high, accompanied or followed by a similar
advance in the other. When both averages dip below previous important
lows, this is regarded as confirmation of a downward trend.
The Dow Jones is one type of market index stating
the prices that fully reflect all existing information. Knowledge
available to participants (traders, analysts, portfolio managers,
market strategists and investors) is already discounted in the price
action. Movements caused by unpredictable events such as acts of
god will be contained within the overall trend. Developed primarily
around stock market averages, the Dow Theory holds that prices progressed
into wave patterns which consisted of three types of magnitude--primary,
secondary and minor. The time involved ranged from less than three
weeks to over a year. The theory also identified retracement patterns,
which are common levels by which trends pare their moves. Such retracements
are 33%, 50% and 66%.
Fibonacci Retracement
The popular retracement series is entirely based
on the mathematical ratios. It is used for determining how far a
price rebounded from its underlying trend.
Thousands of years ago, mathematicians discovered
that a certain number kept appearing throughout the natural world.
It was the ratio describing how flower petals grew around their
central stem, how a snail's shell swirled around its origin and
how a galaxy extended from its core. More importantly for the financial
community, this ratio described how consecutive numbers related
to each other. This "golden ratio" of 0.618 was applied
to numbers by the thirteenth century mathematician Leonardo Fibonacci.
The Fibonacci sequence starts like this: 1, 1, 2,
3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144… where any number in the
sequence is equal to the sum of the preceding two numbers. The ratio
of any two consecutive numbers starts out by oscillating around
0.618 and approaches it exactly as the sequence continues.
Actually, Fibonacci numbers are really one aspect
of trading with Elliot Waves and Gann Angles. As we know, markets
trend up and down, pause to retrace (consolidate, correct) then
continue onward. These retracements often reclaim constant percentages
of the original trend's move and can be predicted with good accuracy
by the Fibonacci sequence. The ratios of consecutive numbers at
the start of the sequence are 1.00, .50 and .67. Market technicians
have long known that market retracements tend to end at the 50%
level as well as at one and two thirds. A retracement of 100% of
the move provides a very strong support/resistance line. All of
these are Fibonacci levels. The one and two thirds levels are really
approximations of the Fibonacci ratio 61.8% and it’s inverse.
Fibonacci levels are simply refined versions of what traders have
been using for years.
Fibonacci retracement levels are really simple tools
yet they are effective on their own. Applying them to Elliot and
Gann makes them much more powerful. Elliot wave counts tend to end
at Fibonacci levels. Gann angles are drawn with slopes that equal
Fibonacci ratios. The most Fibonacci retracement levels are 38.2%,
50% and 61.8%.
Elliot Wave Theory
Ralph Nelson Elliott, developed the Elliott Wave
principle in the late 1920s by discovering that stock markets, thought
to behave in a somewhat chaotic manner, in fact, did not. They did,
however, trade in what he called repetitive cycles, which he discovered
were the emotions of investors as a cause of outside influences,
or predominant psychology of the masses at the time. He had stated
that the upward and downward swings of the mass psychology always
showed up in the same repetitive patterns, which were then divided
into patterns he termed Waves.
The Theory is somewhat based upon the Dow Theory
in as much as the price movements also move in waves. It was understood
by the technicians at the time that because of the fractal nature
of the markets, Elliot was able to breakdown and analyse the markets
in much greater detail. This allowed him to spot unique characteristics
of wave patterns and making detailed market predictions based on
the patterns he had identified. Fractals are mathematical structures,
which on an ever-smaller scale infinitely repeat themselves. The
patterns that Elliott discovered are built in the same way. An impulsive
wave, which goes with the main trend, always shows five waves in
its pattern. On a smaller scale, within each of the impulsive waves
of the before mentioned impulse, again five waves will be found.
Price actions are divided into trends, and corrections, or sideways
movements. Trends show the main direction of prices, while corrections
move against the trend. Elliot labeled these Impulsive waves and
Corrective waves.
Perhaps the most difficult part of writing this piece,
this weekend, has been trying to find the words to explain the Theory
in a language that the majority of our readers would easily comprehend.
The interpretation of the Elliot Wave Theory is as follows: Every
action is followed by a reaction. There are five waves in the direction
of the main trend followed by three corrective waves (a "5-3"
move). A 5-3 move completes a cycle. This 5-3 move then becomes
two subdivisions of the next higher 5-3 wave. The underlying 5-3
pattern remains constant, though the time span of each may vary.
Let’s have a look at the following chart made up of eight
waves (five up and three down) which are labeled 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
a, b, and c.

You can see that the three waves in the direction
of the trend are impulses and therefore these waves also have five
waves. The waves against the trend are corrections and are composed
of three waves.

In the 70s, the Wave Principle gained popularity
through the work of Frost and Prechter. They published a legendary
book on the Elliott Wave, entitled The Elliott Wave Principle –
The Key to Stock Market Profits. In this book, the authors predicted
the bull market of the 1970s both Robert Prechter called the crash
of 1987.

The corrective wave formation normally has three,
in some cases five or more distinct price movements, two in the
direction of the main correction ( A and C) and one against it (B).
Wave 2 and 4 in the above picture are corrections. These waves have
the following structure:

Note that these waves A and C go in the direction
of the shorter term trend, and therefore are impulsive and composed
of five waves, which is shown in the picture above.
An impulse wave formation followed by a corrective
wave, form an Elliott wave degree, consisting of trend and counter
trend. Although the patterns pictured above are bullish, the same
applies for bear markets, where the main trend is down. The Elliott
Wave theory has assigned a series of categories to the waves in
order of the largest to the smallest. They are:
- Grand Super cycle
- Super cycle
- Cycle
- Primary
- Intermediate
- Minor
- Minute
- Minuette
- Sub-Minuette
To use the theory is everyday trading, the trader
will determine the Main Wave or Super cycle, and then goes long
and then sells the position or shorts the position as the pattern
runs out of steam and a reversal is eminent. It was impossible to
develop a Real Time chart with our Trade station system to show
you an accurate layout of the Theory, as the system does not support
the Theory in its software program.
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