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Whether Indian market or American market or anywhere else, technical analysis is usually the term for graphically, geometrically, examining trends to see if there are signals or clues to what will happen in the future. This is opposed to fundamental analysis, which is the domain of earnings and market share and rates and ratios of financial growth, how the company actually does its business.

Common technical analysis features include a day's price range, the high and low for the day. Then you mark what the opening price is and its close. Since it is a factor of time, put the open mark on the left and the close mark on the right, assuming you are running your graph from left to right over the progression of time. Over several days there will be a trend: the price may bounce up and down but the average of these seems to march pretty much the same (we call that sideways); or the price may make a general declining motion; or the price may make a general increasing motion. As with statistics, once you define a mean or average, you have opportunity to define the standard deviation. In technical analysis there are commonly 50 and 200 day averages and they flop around in a graphic corridor of range--the upper range of the average is the ceiling and the lower range of the average is the floor. This is not the same as the 52-week high and low, this is for the average over a period of time such as the 50 or 200 day yardstick.

Next, you plug in trading volumes and their averages. It gets fun, it gets complicated and I've already given you more than two-points worth, but I hope I've at least given you the idea. Good luck.

2007-01-24 03:11:47 · answer #1 · answered by Rabbit 7 · 0 0

Reading and Interpreting Charts

1. The Bid and Ask Direction
2. The Basic Quote Movements
3. The Basic Quote Formations
4. Opening Gaps, Splits and Consolidations
5. Volumes: Get the Real Picture
6. Understanding the Volume's Pulse
7. Supports, Resistances and Trends
8. Forget the ‘Legs'
9. Putting it all Together

2007-01-23 23:10:59 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Technicl Analysis indicators are very many and varied. There are the primary and secondary/supporting indicators. The indicators a trader uses depends on his/her preference. This is something you must learn on your own to determine which indicators you would prefer to use while trading stocks. The technical indicators are very simple to use once you learn how to use them.

2007-01-23 23:06:04 · answer #3 · answered by Muga Wa Kabbz 5 · 0 0

when you're from India then bypass to ICFAI for CFA i.e Chartered monetary diagnosis then you are an diagnosis.when you're from different united states of america then you bypass for CFA search for internet website style you internet . once you more suitable study market then you earn more suitable money from market as a diagnosis or as well as a market participant.

2016-10-16 00:56:54 · answer #4 · answered by tenuta 4 · 0 0

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2007-01-24 18:05:51 · answer #5 · answered by dinu_pawar 5 · 0 0

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