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Chapter 13 Technical Analysis. Technical Analysis As An Art. Prices are Determined by Investors’ Attitudes Prices move in trends Changing Attitude Toward Economic forces Monetary forces Political forces Psychological forces. Technical Analysis As A Science.
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Technical Analysis As An Art • Prices are Determined by Investors’ Attitudes • Prices move in trends • Changing Attitude Toward • Economic forces • Monetary forces • Political forces • Psychological forces
Technical Analysis As A Science • Study of the Action of the Market • Science of Recording in Graphic Form • Price changes, volume, highs and lows,… • The averages of above • Deducing the Probable Future Trend
Is Technical Analysis An Art Or Science? • Art • Martin J. Pring • Science • Robert D. Edwards and John Magee
Underlying Assumptions of Technical Analysis 1. The market value of any good or service is determined solely by the interaction of supply and demand 2. Supply and demand are governed by numerous factors, both rational and irrational
Underlying Assumptions of Technical Analysis 3. Disregarding minor fluctuations, the prices for individual securities and the overall value of the market tend to move in trends, which persist for appreciable lengths of time 4. Prevailing trends change in reaction to shifts in supply and demand relationships and these shifts can be detected in the action of the market
Advantages of Technical Analysis • Not heavily dependent on financial accounting statements • Problems with accounting statements: 1. Lack information needed by security analysts 2. GAAP allows firms to select reporting procedures, resulting in difficulty comparing statements from two firms 3. Nonquantifiable factors do not show up in financial statements
Advantages of Technical Analysis • Fundamental analyst must process new information and quickly determine a new intrinsic value, but technical analyst merely has to recognize a movement to a new equilibrium • Technicians trade when a move to a new equilibrium is underway but a fundamental analyst finds undervalued securities that may not adjust their prices as quickly
Challenges to Technical Analysis • Trading rules • The past may not be repeated • Patterns may become self-fulfilling prophecies • A successful rule will gain followers and become less successful • Rules all require subjective judgment • Assumptions - Empirical tests of Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) show that prices do not move in trends
Is There Any Empirical Evidence To Support Technical Analysis (TA)? • Patterns in Security Prices • Fall one week, bounce back next week • Monthly returns over a long time • Seasonal patterns • January effect (Chapter 12) • Resent Research Merits TA
Charting • Bar Charts • Illustrates each days • High, low, and closing price • Looks at stock price behavior over time • Point-and-Figure Charts • Identifies stock price reversals • Does not consider time • Candlestick Charts • Illustrates each days • Opening, high, low, and closing price
Bar Charts • Trendline • Drawn on chart to identify trend • Channel • Pattern formed by 2 trendlines • Resistance • Downward price movement • Support • Upward price movement
Typical Stock Market Cycle Stock Price Figure 21.2
Typical Stock Market Cycle Stock Price Figure 21.2 Declining Trend Channel Peak Flat Trend Channel Sell Point Rising Trend Channel Declining Trend Channel Buy Point Buy Point Trough Trough
Point-And-Figure Charts • A Series of Xs and Os • Same as Bar Charts • Popular Tool
Candlestick Chart • Candlestick Line • Real body • Difference between opening and closing price • Shadow • Vertical line identifying the high and low price • Can be constructed with Different Time Data • Intraday • Weekly
Contrary-Opinion • Many analysts rely on rules developed from the premise that the majority of investors are wrong as the market approaches peaks and troughs • Technicians try to determine whether investors are strongly bullish or bearish and then trade in the opposite direction • These positions have various indicators
Contrary-Opinion Rules • Mutual fund cash positions • Credit balances in brokerage accounts • Investment advisory opinions • OTC versus NYSE volume • Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) put/call ratio • Futures traders bullish on stock index futures
Follow the Smart Money • Indicators showing behavior of sophisticated investors • The Barron’s Confidence Index • T-Bill - Eurodollar yield spread • Short sales by specialists • Debit balances in brokerage accounts (margin debt)
Other Market Indicators • Breadth of market • Advance-decline • Diffusion index • Short interest • Stocks above their 200-day moving average • Block uptick-downtick ratio
Theoretical Basis Of TA • Dow Theory • Trends • Moving Averages • 5-day • 200-day • Relative Strength • RSI
Dow Theory • Primary Trend - “Tides” • Cycle in years • Intermediate Trend - “waves” • 3 Weeks to 6 months • Short-Term Trend - “ripples” • Volatile and erratic • Basic Tenets next slide
Basic Tenets Of Dow Theory • Requires Data on Stock Indexes • No additional information • Types of Financial Market Movements • Primary • Intermediate • Short-term • Positive Relationship Between • Trend • Volume of shares traded
RSI • Range From 0% to 100% • High • Industry stock prices outperform the market • Indicate a sell signal? Buy signal? • Low The trend is your friend! • Market outperforming the industry stock • Indicates a buy signal? Sell signal?
Stock Price and Volume Techniques • Relative-strength (RS) ratios • For individual stocks and industry groups • Bar charting • Multiple indicator charts • Point-and-figure charts • Overall feel from a consensus of numerous technical indicators
Technical Indicators • Breadth Indicators • Advance-decline line (ADL) • Volume • New high/new low • Sentiment Indicators • Stock market newsletter • Odd-lot trading • Put/call trading • Specialists short selling
Advance-Decline Line ADLt = At - Dt + ADLt - 1