|
Introduction to Technical Analysis -
2
In this second article about FOREX technical analysis we will
look at the various kinds of charts and provide basic
guidelines for reading charts.
Price Charts
Price Charts show information about FOREX prices at specified
intervals of time. Intervals can be from one minute up to
several years and everything in between. Prices can be plotted
with simple line graphs or the price variation for each
interval can be shown by a bar or candlestick pattern.
Line charts are suitable for getting a broad overview of price
movements. They show the close price at the chosen intervals.
Line charts are very clean to read and make it easy to spot
patterns, but they lack the detail of bar and candlestick
charts.
Bar charts offer much more information than line charts. The
length of each bar indicates the price spread for the given
period – a long bar indicates a large difference between high
and low prices. The left tab on the bar shows the opening price
and the right tab show the closing price. You can see at a
glance whether the price fell or rose for that particular
period, and what the price variation was. Bar charts printed on
paper (especially for short periods) can be difficult to read,
but software charts usually have a zoom function that makes it
easier to read closely spaced bars.
Candlestick charts were invented by the Japanese for analyzing
rice contracts. They are similar to bar charts in that they
indicate open, close, high and low prices for a given period.
They are easier to read than bar charts, however, because of
their color coding. Green candlesticks show rising prices and
red candlesticks show falling prices.
Candlestick shapes - when viewed in relationship to
neighbouring candlesticks - provide indicators of market
movement that can aid in chart analysis. Various shapes of
candlesticks are formed according to price spread and the
proximity of opening to closing prices. Candlestick patterns
have been given fanciful names like 'morning star' and 'dark
cloud cover' and once the shapes have been learned, they are
easy to pick out on a chart for identifying trends in the
market.
Price charts are usually supplemented with technical
indicators. There are many Technical Indicators broadly divided
into different categories. Trend indicators, strength
indicators, volatility indicators, and cycle indicators are
just some of the analytical tools used to anticipate movement
and market volume.
Some of the most common technical indicators used in FOREX
are:
Average Directional Movement Index (ADX) – is used to
determine if a market is entering a trend (either downward or
upward) and how strong the trend is. Readings over 25 indicate
a trend with higher values indicating stronger trends.
Moving Average Convergence/Divergence (MACD) – shows the
momentum of the market and the relationship between two moving
averages. When the MACD line crosses the signal line it
indicates a strong market.
Stochastic Oscillator – indicates the strength or
weakness of a market by comparing a closing price to a price
range over a period of time. When the stochastic is above 80 it
indicates the currency is overbought while a stochastic below
20 indicates the currency is oversold.
Relative Strength Indicator (RSI) – is a scale of 100
indicating the highest and lowest prices over a given period.
When the price rises above 70 it is considered overbought and
when the price falls below 30 it is considered oversold.
Moving Average – is the average price for a given time
interval when compared with other prices during similar time
periods. For example, the closing prices over a 3 day period
would have a moving average of the total of the 3 closing
prices divided by 3.
Bollinger Bands – are bands which contain the majority
of a currency's price. The bands are three lines – the upper
and lower lines following the price movement and the middle
line showing the average price. During times of high volatility
the distance between the upper and lower bands widen. If a bar
or candlestick touches one of the bands it indicates overbought
or oversold conditions.
|