StockBangaldesh TA Course
Short Description
Download StockBangaldesh TA Course...
Description
Basic Course on Technical Analysis StockBangladesh.com Rafiqul Hasan Siddiqui Bangladesh Foreign Trade Institute
The basic trading strategy is try to systematize –"cut losses" and –"let profits run".
Bull market A bull market tends to be associated with increasing investors confidence, motivating investors to buy in anticipation of future price increases and future capital gains.
Bear market A bear market is a steady drop in the stock market over a period of time.
Types of Trading Analysis When the objective of the analysis is to determine what stock to buy and at what price, there are two basic methodologies:
• Fundamental Analysis • Technical Analysis
Fundamental analysis • Fundamental analysis is a way of looking at the market through economic, social and political forces that affect supply and demand.
• Fundamental analysis involves analyzing the characteristics of a company in order to estimate its value.
Technical Analysis • Technicians are only interested in the price movements in the market. • Technical analysis just studies supply and demand in a market in an attempt to determine what direction, or trend, will continue in the future.
Technical Analysis Versus Fundamental Analysis •
•
Fundamental analysis maintains that markets may misprice a security in the short run but that the "correct" price will eventually be reached. Profits can be made by trading the mispriced security and then waiting for the market to recognize its "mistake" and reprice the security. Technical analysis maintains that all information is reflected already in the stock price, so fundamental analysis is a waste of time. Trends 'are your friend' and sentiment changes predate and predict trend changes. Investors' emotional responses to price movements lead to recognizable price chart patterns. Technical analysis does not care what the 'value' of a stock is. Their price predictions are only extrapolations from historical price patterns.
Technical Analysis
Fundamental Analysis
Versus
Stock Market Volatility is your friend
The Power of Compounding is your friend
Technical Analysis
Fundamental Analysis
Versus
Day Trading Longer term investing with mutual fund managers like Peter Lynch or John Bogle
Technical Analysis
Fundamental Analysis
Versus
Make money out of movement from the market, with each movement often measured in pennies
Make money out of your stake in companies and how their products or services sell
Technical Analysis
Fundamental Analysis
Versus
How investors see traders
How traders see investors
Technical Analysis
Fundamental Analysis
Versus
This may yield a get rich quickly scheme, when you work on your own terms, using rapid reflexes and lightning fingers, but when you can go broke just as quickly if you don’t know what you’re doing. Market timing rules your methods.
This is the path taken to grow rich more slowly, relatively speaking, but depending on how your portfolio is set up, it can actually be quicker than you think. It often involves buy and hold and longer term investing strategies.
Principles of Technical Analysis 1. Price Discounts Everything all relevant information is already reflected by prices
2. Price Moves In Trends markets trend up, down, or sideways (flat)
3. Price Movements Are Historically Repetitive investors collectively repeat the behavior of the investors that preceded them
TA=Charts
Types of Charts 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Line Chart Bar Chart Volume Bar Chart Equi-Volume Chart Candlestick Chart
Line Chart
Bar Chart
“Zero-Based” Volume Bar Chart
“Relative Adjusted” Volume Bar Chart
Equi-Volume Chart
Equi-Volume Chart
Candle Volume Chart
Candle Volume Chart
Point and Figure Charts
Japanese Candlestick
Candlestick Patterns • Bullish Patterns • Bearish Patterns • Reversal Pattern
Bullish Patterns 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Long white (empty) line Hammer Piercing line Bullish engulfing lines Morning star Bullish doji star
Long white (empty) line
Hammer
Piercing line
Bullish engulfing lines
Morning star
Bullish doji star
Bearish Patterns 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Long black (filled-in) line Hanging Man Dark Cloud Cover Bearish Engulfing Lines Evening Star Doji Star Shooting Star
Long black (filled-in) line
Hanging Man
Dark Cloud Cover
Bearish Engulfing Lines
Evening Star
Doji Star
Shooting Star
Reversal Pattern 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Long-Legged Doji Dragon-Fly Doji Gravestone Doji Star Doji Star
Long-Legged Doji
Dragon-Fly Doji
Gravestone Doji
Star
Doji Star
Neutral Patterns 1. 2. 3. 4.
Spinning Tops Doji Harami Harami Cross
Spinning Tops
Doji
Harami
Harami Cross
Reversal Pattern
Reversal Pattern
Overlays Overlays are generally superimposed over the main price chart. – – – – – – – –
Resistance Support Breakout Trend line Channel Moving average Bollinger bands Pivot point
Price-based indicators These indicators are generally shown below or above the main price chart. – – – – – – – – –
Accumulation/distribution index Advance decline line Average Directional Index Commodity Channel Index MACD - moving average convergence/divergence Parabolic SAR Relative Strength Index (RSI) Stochastic oscillator Trix
Volume based indicators • Money Flow • On-balance volume • PAC charts
Thank you
Technical Analysis CLASS -- II
Rajib bin Ahmed National Bank Ltd.
Support & Resistance • Support defines that level where buyers are strong enough to keep price from falling further. • Resistance defines that level where sellers are too strong to allow price to rise further
Support & Resistance
Support & Resistance • Support and resistance are created because price has memory. • When price pushes above resistance, it becomes a new support level. • Support and resistance come in all varieties and strengths. • Support and resistance exist in all time frames
Role Reversal
Support & Resistance
Trends Bullish Bearish Neutral
Trend Direction
Trend
Bullish Trend lines
Bearish Trend
Trend Timeline • • • • •
Hourly Daily Weekly Monthly Yearly
Technical Analysis Tools for Trends • Trendline • Moving Avg.
Drawing Trendline • Connect Highs to Highs, Lows to Lows • Draw through congestion areas • Ignore tails or spikes
Drawing Trend lines
Strength of a trend Trends are stronger…….. The longer the trendline The more contacts between prices and the trendline When volume expands in the direction of the trend
Strength of a trend
Strength of a trend
Trading Rule
Protective Stop 1. Once you are long the market place a stop loss order just below the trendline 2. Move your stop up as trend progresses
Protective Stop
Break In Trendline • Steep trendlines (over 45 degrees) precede sharp breaks • A pullback to the trendline after a break is often a good shorting opportunity
Break in Trend
Trade on Trend Breaks
Channel • A line running parallel to a trend line • Drawn through tops of rallies and bottoms of declines
Channel
Channel • Marks maximum power of bulls & bears • The wider the channel the stronger the trend
Types of Channel
Trading Rule for Channel • Go long in lower quarter of channel • Take profits in upper quarter
Trading Rules
Moving Avg. Simple Weighted Exponential
SMA
Linear or Weighted Moving Avg. WMA SMA gives equal weight to each price point WMA gives more emphasis to the latest data
EMA moving average multiplies a An exponential percentage of the most recent price by the previous period's average price
EMA
Moving average trend reversals are formed in two main ways: when the price moves through a moving average and when it moves through moving average crossovers.
,
moving averages are used to identify support and resistance levels
When To Use • Works well in trending market • Loses money in whipsaw market
Whipsaw Market
Thank you
Technical Analysis Course By StockBangladesh.com
Rajib Bin Ahmed Software Developer
Bollinger Bands • Bollinger bands are used to measure a market’s volatility . • When a stock is making major price movements , Bollinger bands will be farther away (expand) from the stock’s price chart. • When a stock is moving steadily with minor price movements, the Bollinger bands will be closer to (contract upon) the stock’s price chart .
Bollinger Bands • • •
A simple moving average in the middle. An upper band (SMA plus 2 standard deviations) A lower band (SMA minus 2 standard deviations)
Simple moving average in the middle
Upper band
Lower band
Bollinger Bands
Bollinger Bounce
Bollinger Bounce
Bollinger Bounce
Bollinger Squeeze
Bollinger Squeeze
Bollinger Squeeze
Double Bottom Buy
Use • Bollinger Bands can help generate buy and sell signals, they are not designed to determine the future direction of a security
Use • To identify periods of high and low volatility. • To identify periods when prices are at extreme, and possibly unsustainable, levels.
Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD)
• Moving Average • Convergence • Divergence
MACD MACD = shorter term moving average longer term moving average
MACD
• Faster moving average • Slower moving average • Histogram
MACD (12, 26, 9) • The first number (commonly 12) represents the number of days used to calculate the faster moving average or EMA(12).
MACD (12, 26, 9) • The second number (commonly 26) represents the number of days used to calculate the slower moving average or EMA(26).
MACD (12, 26, 9) • The third number (commonly 9) represents the number of days used to calculate the “trigger line” using EMA(9).
EMA(12) - EMA(26) • A green line is calculated with the EMA using the first number of the MACD (commonly 12) minus the EMA using the second number (commonly 26).
EMA(12) - EMA(26).
EMA(12) - EMA(26)
EMA(9) • The red line (the MACD Signal Line or Trigger Line) is calculated using the EMA using the third number (commonly 9).
EMA(9)
EMA(9)
Histogram • Difference between the fast and slow moving average.
Histogram
Divergence
Convergence
MACD Crossover
MACD Centerline Crossover
MACD Crossover
Stochastics • Stochastics plots the current close in relation to the price range over the length set for this indicator and gives this a percentage value. • Stochastics is an oscillator that measures overbought and oversold conditions in the market. • Stochastics are scaled from 0 to 100.
Types of Stochastic Oscillators • Fast • Slow • Full
Fast Stochastics:
Example
%K(fast)
%D(fast)
Fast Stochastics:
Slow Stochastics
%K(slow)
%D(slow)
Slow Stochastics
Use • Readings below 20 are considered oversold • Readings above 80 are considered overbought
Use
• Buy and sell signals can also be given when %K crosses above or below %D
Use
Use
Use • Requires a double dip below 80 and the second dip results in the sell signal . • For a buy signal, wait for a positive divergence to develop after the indicator moves below 20
Relative Strength Index (RSI)
• Identifies overbought and oversold conditions in the market. • Scaled from 0 to 100. • Readings below 30 indicate oversold • Readings over 70 indicate overbought.
Calculation
Overbought/Oversold
Centerline Crossover
Use
Use
Use
Average True Range • The Average True Range (ATR) determines a security’s volatility over a given period. • The average true range is the (moving) average of the true range for a given period
The true range is the greatest of the following: • Difference between the current maximum and minimum (high and low). • Difference between the previous closing price and the current maximum. • Difference between the previous closing price and the current minimum.
True Range
Calculation • The first TR value in a series is simply the High minus the Low, and the first 14-day ATR is the average of the daily ATR values for the last 14 days.
Calculation Second and subsequent 14-day ATR : • • •
Multiply the previous 14-day ATR by 13. Add the most recent day's TR value. Divide by 14.
Example
Use
Use • ATR cannot predict direction or duration, simply activity levels. • Low levels indicate quiet trading (small ranges) • High levels indicate violent trading (large ranges).
Money Flow Index (MFI) • Money flow in technical analysis is price multiplied by volume technical analysis. • Indicates the rate at which money is invested into a security and then withdrawn from it.
Calculation The typical price for each day is the average of high, low and close,
Calculation Money flow is the product of typical price and the volume on that day .
Calculation • Positive money flow is the total for those days where the typical price is higher than the previous day's typical price . • Negative money flow where below .
Calculation • money flow index ranging from 0 to 100
Calculation
Use • Readings above 80 on the scale are considered overbought (bearish). • Readings below 20 on the scale are considered oversold (bullish). • A divergence between price and MFI often signals an imminent reversal of the trend.
Divergence
Less Overbought & Oversold Signal
On Balance Volume (OBV) • This was one of the first and most popular indicators to measure positive and negative volume flow . • OBV is based on a cumulative total volume.
Calculation • OBV is calculated by adding the day's volume to a running cumulative total when the security's price closes up, and subtracts the volume when it closes down.
Calculation • If today the closing price is greater than yesterday's closing price, then the new : OBV = Yesterday's OBV + Today's Volume
Calculation • If today the closing price is less than yesterday's closing price, then the new: OBV = Yesterday's OBV - Today's Volume
Calculation • If today the closing price is equal to yesterday's closing price, then the new: OBV = Yesterday's OBV
Calculation
Divergence • If the price is likewise rising, then the OBV can serve as a confirmation of the price uptrend. In such a case, the rising price is the result of an increased demand for the security, which is a requirement of a healthy uptrend.
Divergence • If prices are moving higher while the volume line is dropping, a negative divergence is present. This divergence suggests that the uptrend is not healthy and should be taken as a warning signal that the trend will not persist.
Example
Example
Example
Thank you
Technical Analysis Course By StockBangladesh.com
Rajib Bin Ahmed Software Developer
Accumulation/Distribution Line • Assess the cumulative flow of money into and out of a security. • Focus on the price action for a given period (day, week, month).
Accumulation/Distribution Line Vs OBV • OBV uses the change in closing price from one period to the next to value the volume as positive or negative. • Focused on the price action for a given period (day, week, month)
Benefits • Monitor General Money Flow - The A/D line can be used as a gauge for the general flow of money. If the A/D line is moving higher, this signals that there is buying pressure that is starting to prevail. On the flip side, if the A/D line is moving downward, this signals that increased selling pressure is beginning to gain a foothold.
Confirmation - You can also use the A/D line to confirm the strength, and possibly the longevity, of a current move.
Drawbacks • Trading Gaps - The A/D line does not take trading gaps into consideration. • Minor Changes - Sometimes it can be difficult to detect minor changes in volume flows.
Close Location Value Looks at the location of the close and compares it to the range for a given period (one day, week or month). The CLV will have a value from +1 to -1:
• A value of zero would mean that the price closed halfway between the high and low of the range. • A value of +1 means the close is equal to the high of the range. • A value of -1 means the close is equal to the low of the range.
Calculation CLV = ([(C-L) - (H - C)] / (H - L)) Where: C = the closing price H = the high of the price range L = the low of the price range
Close Location Value • • • •
•
If the stock closes on the high, the top of the range, then the value would be plus one. If the stock closes above the midpoint of the highlow range, but below the high, then the value would be between zero and one. If the stock closes exactly halfway between the high and the low, then the value would be zero. If the stock closes below the midpoint of the highlow range, but above the low, then the value would be negative. If the stock closes on the low, the absolute bottom of the range, then the value would be minus one.
Accumulation/Distribution Line The CLV is then multiplied by the corresponding period's volume, and the total will form the A/D line
Signals
Signals
Bullish Signals
Bearish Signals
Bollinger Band Width • Bollinger Band Width, which represents the expanding and contracting of the bands based on recent volatility. • Bollinger Band Width is the distance between the two bands.
Calculation
Commodity Channel Index (CCI) • Commodity Channel Index (CCI) was designed to identify cyclical turns in commodities. • Lambert recommended using 1/3 of a complete cycle (low to low or high to high) as a time frame for the CCI.
Calculation • • • •
Open up the stock's yearly chart. Locate two highs or two lows on the chart. Take note of the time interval between these two highs or lows (cycle length). Divide that time interval by three to get the optimal time interval to use in the calculation (1/3 of the cycle).
Calculation • • • • • •
Typical Price, TP = (HIGH + LOW +CLOSE)/3 SMA(TP, N) = SUM[TP, N]/N D = TP — SMA(TP, N) SMA(D, N) = SUM[D, N]/N M = SMA(D, N) * 0,015 CCI = M/D Where: SMA — Simple Moving Average N — number of periods, used for calculation.
Signal • CCI can be used to identify overbought and oversold levels • Divergences can be applied to increase the robustness of signals.
Signal
Signal
Ultimate Oscillator • The Ultimate Oscillator combines a stock's price action during three different time frames into one bounded oscillator. • Values range from 0 to 100 with 50 as the center line. • Oversold territory exists below 30 and overbought territory extends from 70 to 100.
Ultimate Oscillator • Three time frames can be specified by the user. • Typically values of 7-periods, 14-periods and 28-periods are used.
Calculation • True Low (TL) TL = the lower of today's low or yesterday's close.
• Buying Pressure (BP) BP = Today's close - Today's TL. • True Range (TR)
Calculation • Calculate BPSum1, BPSum2, and BPSum3 by adding up all of the BPs for each of the three specified time frames. • Calculate TRSum1, TRSum2, and TRSum3 by adding up all of the TR's for each of the three specified time frames.
Calculation • The Raw Ultimate Oscillator (RawUO) is equal to: 4 * (BPSum1 / TRSum1) + 2 * (BPSum2 / TRSum2) + (BPSum3 / TRSum3)
• The Final Ultimate Oscillator is equal to:
( RawUO / (4 + 2 + 1) ) * 100
Signal • A bearish divergence appeared well before the top and persisted until the stock reversed. • Extreme values are rare for the Ultimate Oscillator. • Crosses above and below the center line (50) are relatively common.
TRIX • TRIX is a momentum indicator that displays the percent rate-of-change of a triple exponentially smoothed moving average of a security's closing price. • Used to anticipate turning points in a trend through its divergence with the security price. • TRIX is designed to filter out stock movements that are insignificant to the larger trend of the stock.
Calculation For a 15-day period: 1. Calculate the 15-day exponential moving average of the closing price. 2. Calculate the 15-day exponential moving average of the moving average calculated in step #1. 3. Calculate the 15-day exponential moving average of the moving average calculated in step #2. 4. Finally, calculate the 1-day percent change of the moving average calculated in step #3.
Signal • A positive TRIX is thus akin to a positive trending price, allowing the indicator to act as a buy signal whenever it crosses up above the zero line. • Crossing below the zero line suggests the price is tending to close down at the end of each period, which can be a sell signal.
Signal Line • A buy signal is triggered when TRIX crosses above its signal line. • A sell signal is triggered when TRIX crosses below its signal line.
Advantages of TRIX • It filters out market noise using the triple exponential average calculation. • TRIX is best used in conjunction with another market-timing indicator - this minimizes false indications.
Using two different time spans
StochRSI • StochRSI is an oscillator that measures the level of RSI relative to its range, over a set period of time. • The indicator uses RSI as the foundation and applies to it the formula behind Stochastics. • The result is an oscillator that fluctuates between 0 and 1.
Calculation
Calculation
Calculation
Signals • Overbought and Oversold Crossovers • Centerline Crossovers • Positive and Negative Divergences
Example
Momentum • The Momentum Technical Indicator measures the amount that a security’s price has changed over a given time span. • Momentum is calculated as a ratio of today’s price to the price several (N) periods ago.
Calculation MOMENTUM = CLOSE(i)/CLOSE(i-N)*100 Where: CLOSE(i) — is the closing price of the current bar; CLOSE(i-N) — is the closing bar price N periods ago.
Momentum
Signals • Zero-line crossings • Using Trendlines • Extreme Values
Zero-line crossings • Crossing above the zero line could be a buy signal if the price trend is up and a crossing below the zero line, a sell signal, if the price trend is down.
Using Trendlines • The trendlines on the momentum chart are broken sooner than those on the price chart. The value of the momentum indicator is that it turns sooner than the market itself, making it a leading indicator.
Extreme Values • One of the benefits of oscillator analysis is being able to determine when markets are in extreme areas. At extreme positive values, momentum implies an overbought position; at extreme negative values, an oversold position
Envelopes • An envelope is comprised of two moving averages. One moving average is shifted upward and the second moving average is shifted downward. The envelope is plotted around a price plot or indicator.
Calculation • Calculate SMA(n) Using 5% as an example the calculation Top band = Moving Average + (Moving Average x 5 ÷ 100) Bottom band = Moving Average - (Moving Average x 5 ÷ 100)
Interpretation • Envelopes define the upper and the lower margins of the price range • Signal to sell appears when the price reaches the upper margin of the band • Signal to buy appears when the price reaches the lower margin.
Williams’ Percent • Williams’ Percent Range Technical Indicator (%R) is a dynamic technical indicator, which determines whether the market is overbought/oversold. Williams’ %R is very similar to the Stochastic Oscillator.
Calculation • %R = (HIGH(i-n)-CLOSE)/(HIGH(i-n)-LOW(in))*100 Where: CLOSE — is today’s closing price; HIGH(i-n) — is the highest high over a number (n) of previous periods; LOW(i-n) — is the lowest low over a number (n) of previous periods.
Signal • Indicator values ranging between 80 and 100% indicate that the market is oversold. • Indicator values ranging between 0 and 20% indicate that the market is overbought.
Example
Signal • An interesting phenomenon of the Williams Percent Range indicator is its uncanny ability to anticipate a reversal in the underlying security’s price.
Thank you
Technical Analysis CLASS – V
Mahbub Hasan MBA-Finance, CFA L1 Assistant Director, FIU, AMLD, Bangladesh Bank
Leading v Lagging Indicators • A leading indicator gives a buy signal before the new trend or reversal occurs. • A lagging indicator gives a signal after the trend has started and basically informs you about the onset of a trend
2 categories of Indicators • Oscillators are leading indicators. • Trend indicators are lagging indicators.
Oscilltors • RSI • Stochastics • Ultimate Oscillator Etc……..
Oscillator……. They signal trend change. Usually when an oscillator remains in the overbought or oversold levels for a long period of time, that means there is a strong trend occurring
Oscillator…….
Conflicting indication
Lagging Indicators • Trend Following indicators MACD SMA EMA etc.....
Momentum • Lagging and leading indicator
Classical Charting • • • • • • •
Trend Lines Support/Resistance Channel Continuation Patterns Reversal Patterns Gaps & Spikes Moving Averages
Chart Patterns
Head & Shoulder
Cup & Handle
Double Tops & Bottoms
Triangles
Flag & Pennant
Wedge
Rounding Bottom
To profit from ascending & descending triangle
• Watch For: An ascending or descending pattern forming over three to four weeks. • SET Target Price: Entry price plus the pattern’s height for an upward breakout. Entry price minus the pattern’s height for a downward breakout.
To Profit from Symmetrical Triangles Watch: Sideways movement, a period of rest, before the breakout. Price of the asset traveling between two converging trendlines. Breakout ¾ of the way to the apex.
Target Price: Entry price plus the pattern’s height for an upward breakout. Entry price minus the pattern’s height for a downward breakout.
Head & Shoulder
To Profit……. Sell as soon as the price moves below the neckline after the descent from the right shoulder Buy as soon as the price moves above the neckline after the ascent from the right shoulder
To Profit from the Double Bottom Pattern
Purchase When: The price exceeds the middle-peak price. Watch For: A price increase of 10% to 20% from the first trough to the middle peak. Two equal lows, not to differ by more than 3% or 4%.
To Profit from the Double Top
Sell when - The price drops below the middle-trough price Watch: A price decrease of 10% to 20% from the first peak to the middle trough. Two equal highs, not to differ by more than 3% or 4%
Profit from 3 bottom
Purchase When: The price exceeds the resistance established by the prior peaks. Watch For: A series of three identical troughs at the end of a prolonged downtrend. Target Price: Entry price plus the pattern’s height
Profit from 3 Tops
Purchase When: The price falls below the support that formed from the prior troughs. Watch For: A series of three peaks at relatively the same level. Target Price: Entry price minus the pattern’s height .
Fibonacci Studies • Fibonacci Numbers 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 610, etc.
4 popular Fibonacci studies: Fibonacci Arcs Fibonacci Fans Fibonacci Retracements Fibonacci Time zone
Interpretation Anticipating changes in trends as prices near the lines created by the Fibonacci studies
Fibonacci Arcs
Interpretation of Fibonacci Arc
anticipating support and resistance as Prices approach the arcs
Fibonacci Fan Lines displayed by drawing a trend line between two extreme points
Calculation
Fibonacci Retracements Price will retrace a large portion of an original move and Find support or resistance at the key Fibonacci levels before it continues in the original direction
Fibonacci Retracement - levels
Typical Retracements
GAPS
Gaps
Gaps
Pivot • • • • •
Pivot point (P) = (H + L + C) / 3 First resistance level (R1) = (2 * P) - L First support level (S1) = (2 * P) - H Second resistance level (R2) = P + (R1 - S1) Second support level (S2) = P - (R1 - S1)
Usage of pivot
Money Management • Select a risk-reward ratio for yourself • Determine the risk & reward of your decision to buy, sell or hold a stock • Compare the previous two risk-reward to make a final decision
Money Management… • Select a time period • Select desired number of technical indicators
Money Management…. • Get the statistics of those indicators for current stock • From that you shall get the probability of successful predication of an indicator for current stock • This will determine risk-reward of your decision based on an indicator
Thank you
Technical Analysis CLASS – VI
Mahbub Hasan MBA-Finance, CFA L1 Assistant Director, FIU, AMLD, Bangladesh Bank
Pivot ponts • • • • •
Pivot point (P) = (H + L + C) / 3 First resistance level (R1) = (2 * P) - L First support level (S1) = (2 * P) - H Second resistance level (R2) = P + (R1 - S1) Second support level (S2) = P - (R1 - S1)
Pivot points
Andrew’s Pitchfork uses 3 parallel trendlines to identify possible levels of support and resistance. The trendlines are created by placing three points at the end of identified trends. e.g. usually placing the points in three consecutive peaks or troughs. Once the points have been placed, a straight line is drawn from the first point that intersects the midpoint of the other two.
Andrew’s Pitchfork • Also known as median line studies
Pitchfork
Pitchfork
Pitchfork
Elliott Wave
Five wave pattern (dominant trend) Impulse Pattern
Dominant trend can be in either direction
Three types of dominant trend
Elliott Wave counter-trend waves will usually retrace against the trending waves by 38.2, 50 and 61.8 percent
Three wave pattern (corrective trend) Corrective Pattern
Wave 1 Rarely obvious at its inception Fundamental news is almost universally negative Sentiment surveys are decidedly bearish Volume might increase a bit as prices rise, but not by enough to alert many technical analysts
Wave 2
Wave two corrects wave one Bearish sentiment quickly builds Volume isn't lower during wave 2 than during wave 1 Can never extend beyond the starting point of wave one Prices usually do not retrace more than 61.8% of the wave 1 gains
Wave 3
usually the largest and most powerful wave in a trend fundamental analysts start to raise earnings estimates prices rise quickly, corrections are short-lived and shallow
as wave3 starts, the news is probably still bearish, and most market players remain negative by wave 3's midpoint, the crowd will often join the new bullish trend wave three often extends wave one by a ratio of 1.618:1
Wave 4
typically clearly corrective prices may meander sideways for an extended period wave 4 typically retraces less than 38.2% of wave 3
volume is well below than that of wave 3 a good place to buy a pull back the most distinguishing feature of fourth waves is that they often prove very difficult to count
Wave 5
the final leg in the direction of the dominant trend everyone is bullish this is when many average investors finally buy in volume is lower than that of wave 3 many momentum indicators start to show divergences
Types of Corrective Pattern • Simple Correction (Zig-Zag) • Complex Corrections (Flat, Irregular, Triangle)
Simple Zig-Zag
Fibonacci Ratios inside a Zig-Zag Correction • Wave B Usually 50% of Wave A Should not exceed 75% of Wave A
• Wave C either 1 x Wave A or 1.62 x Wave A or 2.62 x Wave A
Complex Corrections • Flat • Irregular • Triangle
Complex Correction
Triangle Correction
Alteration Rule
If Wave 2 is a simple correction,
expect Wave 4 to be a complex correction If Wave 2 is a complex correction, expect Wave 4 to be a simple correction
Wave A
typically harder to identify the fundamental news is usually still positive increased volume rising volatility
Wave B
Prices reverse higher, which many see as a resumption of the now longgone bull market the peak may be seen as the right shoulder of a head and shoulders reversal pattern volume during wave B < volume during wave A fundamentals are probably no longer improving
Wave C
typically at least as large as wave A often extends to 1.618 times wave A or beyond volume picks up
Chaikin Volatility • Calculate 10 days EMA of (High-Low) – EMA[H-L, 10]
• Calculate % change in EMA during 10days – (EMA-EMA[10 days ago])/EMA(10days ago)
Chaikin
Chaikin Volatility • An increase in volatility => bottom is near • An decrease in volatility => top is near
Fibonacci
Fibonacci Expansion
Fibonacci Rally
Fibonacci – Morning gap
Fibonacci – 2nd High/Low
Fib Time Zone
Market Psychology • Contrarian View of Trading • Loss Aversion • Loss v gain
Market Psychology • Contrarian View of Trading – Negative Vol Index – Mutual Fund Cash Position – Brokerage firm Credit Balance – MFR = Mu Fund Cash / Total Asset – MFR < 5% => Market Bullish, firms investing cash – MFR>13% => Mkt Bearish, firms holding cash
Loss Aversion Psychologically losses are 2times more powerful than similar amount of gain
Sentiment Indicator • • • • •
Put-Call Ratio Commercial Activities Media Mutual Fund Cash position Debit Balance of Brokerage Houses
Trading System Basic Components 1. Market and timeframe 2. Entry: trigger that initiates your buy or sell signal.
3. Stop Loss: level at which you will cut your losses in the event of the trade going against you. 4. Profit Target: level at which you will exit the trade to take profits.
Market:
Trading System
ForEx Market
Stock MarketDSE/CSE, Insurance/Bank, Basic Components Bond Market Options Market Futures Market
Timeframe: Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Quarterly, Annual
Entry i.e. Trigger: Trading
System
Trigger from Indicators Basic Components Trigger from Chart Analysis Trigger from Candlestick
Stop Loss:
Trading System = Trigger Price +/- n% of Trigger Price Basic Components
If trigger is buy@100 Tk. Stop Loss = 100 – 5 = 95 Tk. If trigger is sell@100 Tk. Stop Loss = 100 + 5 = 105 Tk.
Profit Target:
Trading System
= Trigger Price +/-Basic n% of Trigger Price Components If trigger is buy@100 Tk. Profit Target = 100 + 25 = 125 Tk.
If trigger is sell@100 Tk. Profit Target = 100 - 25 = 105 Tk.
Market:
Trading System
ForEx Market
Stock MarketDSE/CSE, Insurance/Bank, Basic Components Bond Market Options Market Futures Market
Timeframe: Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Quarterly, Annual
Developing a Trading system • Develop your own style of trading • Build your own technical toolbox
Technical Tasks Analyzing following 4: 1. Price 2. Vol 3. Time 4. Sentiment
Technical Toolbox Areas of Technical Analysis: 4 areas: Price Analysis Vol. Analysis Time/period Analysis Sentiment Analysis
Price Analysis Trend Identification • Trendlines , channels • Smoothing, Moving averages Patterns • Triangles , flags , gaps • Candlesticks Momentum • Single line oscillators (RSI, Momentum) • Multiple line oscillators (Stochastics) • Directional Movement, Parabolics • Bollinger Bands , Percent Bands Relative levels • Benchmarking • Log scaling • Spreads and Ratios
Volume Analysis • Analysis of • Liquidity • Participation • Breadth
Volume Analysis • Participation: OBV, Cumulative Volume • Liquidity: No. Shares Issued, Turnover • Breadth: Sector Analysis, Adv.-Decline
Time Analysis • Cycles • Timeframe • Extent
Time Analysis • Cycles Seasonal, Economic, Political • Timeframe Short, Medium, Long Cyclical vs. Secular • Extent Length of trend Trend Correction
Sentiment Analysis • Speculation • Consensus • Anecdotal
Sentiment Analysis • Speculation IPO Margin Level Mutual Fund Cash Level Apparent effects of good & bad news
• Consensus • Anecdotal
Sentiment Analysis • Speculation • Consensus % of bullish newsletter, % of bearish Apparent Public Opinion • Anecdotal Superbowl, Magazine Covers
Combination Tools • Indicators that covers more than one area, such as: time & price, price & volume, price & sentiment etc.
Combination Tools • time & price: Market Profile (shows time spent at each price during the day, forms a value area on the chart) MESA (maximum entropy spectral analysis, finds cycles in the data and projects them forward)
Combination Tools • price & volume: – Money Flow • price times volume summed per trade
• used as a supply/demand indicator – Equivolume bars • have width in proportion to volume • used to allocate significance to price bars
Combination Tools • price & sentiment: Elliott Wave wave structure follows public emotions, can identify ebb and flow of trading activity
Developing a Trading system • Be Objective – Why am I in this trade? – Why do Iike/dislike my position?
How to remain objective? • Know what you are going to do before you do it. • Write down your trading rules/system. • Ignore absolute return, concentrate on Reward/Risk. • Know your risk tolerance.
Risk management • What’s Risk? • It’s DEFINABLE PROBABILITY OF FAILURE
Risk management • Risk Tolerance – 90% trader don’t know it • Risk to Reward Ratio
Risk mgmt • Risk tolerance • Depends on your capital
Risk mgmt • Proper Stop Loss • Don’t use popular %
Risk Mgmt • Risk-Reward Ratio Most famous measure is Sharpe Ratio.
Sharpe Ratio = (Stock’s Return – Risk Free Rate)/Std Div of Stock’s Return
Risk Mgmt • Absolute return shouldn’t be used while ranking stocks • Stocks should be ranked in terms of riskreward ratio
Money Management • Select a risk-reward ratio for yourself • Determine the risk & reward of your decision to buy, sell or hold a stock • Compare the previous two risk-reward to make a final decision
Money Management… • Select a time period • Select desired number of technical indicators
Money Management…. • Get the statistics of those indicators for current stock • From that you shall get the probability of successful predication of an indicator for current stock • This will determine risk-reward of your decision based on an indicator
TA Course: Class VII
Amibroker • How to install amibroker ? • Setting up database for amibroker. • Importing data into amibroker .
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
How to install amibroker
Setting up database
Setting up database
Setting up database
Setting the wizard
Setting the wizard
Setting the wizard
Setting the wizard
Setting the wizard
Setting the wizard
Setting the wizard
Setting the wizard
Updating Data Daily • Go To http://www.stockbangladesh.com/download_ stock_data.php (Download section) daily after 4 PM. • Click on “Download last trading day data all together in a file”. It will open http://www.stockbangladesh.com/download_ last_day_data.php page.
Using Amibroker
Using Amibroker
Using Amibroker
Using Amibroker
Working with chart sheets and Templates
Working with chart sheets and Templates
Working with chart sheets and Templates
Working with chart sheets and Templates
Working with chart sheets and Templates
Using Amibroker
Creating your own indicators There are two ways to create your own indicators: 1) Using drag-and-drop interface. 2) By writing own formula.
How to insert a new indicator?
How to remove the indicator plot from the pane.
Writing your own formula
Writing your own formula
Writing your own formula
Writing your own formula
Writing your own formula
Bar Replay
Bar Replay
Fibonacci Trading 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55 1+2=3 2+3=5 3+5=8 5+8=13
Fibonacci Retracements Pattern • Fibonacci retracements often occur at three levels 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8%.
Fibonacci Retracements Pattern
Stock Bangladesh portfolio
Stock Bangladesh portfolio
Stock Bangladesh portfolio
Stock Bangladesh portfolio
Thank you
Technical Analysis
Debabrata Kumar Sarker IDLC Finance Ltd.
Technical Analysis Technicians are only interested in the price movements in the market. Technical analysis just studies supply and demand in a market in an attempt to determine what direction, or trend, will continue in the future.
Principles of Technical Analysis. 1. Price Discounts Everything 2. Price Moves In Trends 3. Price Movements Are Historically Repetitive
Tools of Technical Analysis - Volume Japanese Candlesticks Indicators
Bands (Risk Measurement) Chart Pattern
Volume
Volume Volume has two major premises: When prices rise or fall, an increase in volume is strong confirmation that the rise or fall in price is real and that the price movement had strength. When prices rise or fall and there is a decrease in volume, then this is interpreted as being a weak price move, because the price move had very little strength and interest from traders.
Volume Spikes
Japanese Candlestick
Japanese Candlestick
Candlestick Patterns Bullish Patterns Bearish Patterns Reversal Pattern
Bullish Patterns 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
Long white (empty) line Hammer Piercing line Bullish engulfing lines Morning star Bullish doji star
Long white (empty) line
Hammer
Piercing line
Bullish engulfing lines
Morning star
Bullish doji star
Bearish Patterns 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
Long black (filled-in) line Hanging Man Dark Cloud Cover Bearish Engulfing Lines Evening Star Doji Star Shooting Star
Long black (filled-in) line
Hanging Man
Dark Cloud Cover
Bearish Engulfing Lines
Evening Star
Doji Star
Shooting Star
Reversal Pattern 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Long-Legged Doji Dragon-Fly Doji Gravestone Doji Star Doji Star
Long-Legged Doji
Dragon-Fly Doji
Gravestone Doji
Star
Doji Star
Neutral Patterns 1. 2. 3. 4.
Spinning Tops Doji Harami Harami Cross
Spinning Tops
Harami
Harami Cross
Reversal Pattern
Reversal Pattern
Indicators
A leading indicator gives a buy signal before the new trend or reversal occurs. A lagging indicator gives a signal after the trend has started and basically informs you about the onset of a trend
Oscillators are leading indicators. Trend indicators are lagging indicators.
RSI Money Flow Index Williams % R Accumulation Distribution Line
Trend Following indicators SMA EMA MACD
RSI The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is an oscillator that measures current price strength in relation to previous prices
RSI - Generate buy and sell signals
- Show overbought and oversold conditions - Confirm price movement
RSI Buy Signal
Buy when the RSI crosses above the oversold line (30). RSI Sell Signal
Sell when the RSI crosses below the overbought line (70).
Money Flow Index (MFI) The Money Flow Index (MFI) uses price and volume and the concept of accumulation Distribution to create an overbought and oversold indicator that is helpful in confirming trends in prices and warning of potential reversals in prices.
Interpreting the MFl
Below 20 is considered oversold; look for buying opportunities. Above 80 is in overbought territory; look for sell signals.
Money Flow Index Divergences If price is rising, and the volume on up days is greater than the volume on down days, then this is confirming of the price rise.
Likewise, if price is falling and the volume on down days is greater than the volume on up days, then the recent downward trend in stock prices is confirmed.
Money Flow Index Divergences In contrast, if prices rise, yet the volume on the up days is less than the volume transacted on down days, then money is secretly pouring out of the stock; this is a bearish divergence. And similarly, when prices fall, but the volume on the down days is less than the volume on up days, then money is flowing back into the stock, a bullish divergence
Money Flow Index Divergences
Williams %R
Williams %R is an overbought and oversold technical indicator that can give easy to interpret buy and sell signals.
Williams %R Williams %R Buy Signal When the Williams %R indicator is below the oversold line (20) and it rises to cross over the 20 line, then buy. Williams %R Sell Signal Sell when the Williams %R indicator is above the overbought line (80) and then falls below the 80 line.
Williams %R
Accumulation Distribution Accumulation Distribution uses volume to confirm price trends or warn of weak movements that could result in a price reversal.
Accumulation: Volume is considered to be accumulated when the day's close is higher than the previous day's closing price. Thus the term "accumulation day" Distribution: Volume is distributed when the day's close is lower than the previous day's closing price. Many traders use the term "distribution day"
Simple Moving Average
The Simple Moving Average (SMA) is used mainly to identify trend direction, but is commonly used to generate buy and sell signals. The SMA is an average, or in statistical speak - the mean.
Exponential Moving Average The Exponential Moving Average (EMA) weighs current prices more heavily than past prices. This gives the Exponential Moving Average the advantage of being quicker to respond to price fluctuations than a Simple Moving Average. However, that can also be viewed as a disadvantage because the EMA is more prone to whipsaws
MACD The MACD indicator is one of the most popular technical analysis tools. MACD: The 12-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA) minus the 26-period EMA. MACD Signal Line: A 9-period EMA of the MACD. MACD Histogram:
The MACD minus the MACD Signal Line.
MACD Moving Average Crossovers MACD Buy Signal A buy signal is generated when the MACD (blue line) crosses above the MACD Signal Line (red line). MACD Sell Signal Similarly, when the MACD crosses below the MACD Signal Line a sell signal is generated
Risk Measurement
Bollinger bands are used to measure a market’s volatility . Bollinger Bands When a stock is making major price movements , Bollinger bands will be farther away (expand) from the stock’s price chart. When a stock is moving steadily with minor price movements, the Bollinger bands will be closer to (contract upon) the stock’s price chart .
A simple moving average in the middle. Bollinger Bands An upper band (SMA plus 2 standard deviations) A lower band (SMA minus 2 standard deviations)
Bollinger Bands
Bollinger Squeeze
Bollinger Squeeze
Charting
Chart Pattern Elliot Wave Fibonacci Studies Regression Channel Support/Resistance
Elliott Wave Elliott Wave theory states that prices move in waves. These waves occur in a repeating pattern of a (1) move up, (2) then a partial retracement down, (3) another move up, (4) a retracement, (5) then finally a last move up. Then, there is a (A) full retracement, followed by a (B) partial retracement upward, then (C) a full move downward. This repeats on a macro and micro time frame.
Fibonacci Fibonacci tools utilize special ratios that naturally occur in nature to help predict points of support or resistance. Fibonacci numbers are 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, etc. The sequence occurs by adding the previous two numbers (i.e. 1+1=2, 2+3=5) The main ratio used is .618, this is found by dividing one Fibonacci number into the next in sequence Fibonacci number (55/89=0.618). The logic most often used by Fibonacci based traders is that since Fibonacci numbers occur in nature and the stock, futures, and currency markets are creations of nature - humans. Therefore, the Fibonacci sequence should apply to the financial markets.
Fibonacci Fibonacci Retracements Fibonacci Arcs
Fibonacci Fans Fibonacci Time Extensions
Linear Regression Channel
Linear Regression Line: A line that best fits all the data points of interest. Upper Channel Line: A line that runs parallel to the Linear Regression Line and is usually one to two standard deviations above the Linear Regression Line. Lower Channel Line: This line runs parallel to the Linear Regression Line and is usually one to two standard deviations below the Linear Regression Line.
Support Level
& Resistance Level
THANK YOU
View more...
Comments