I find the stories about the California Gold Rush era fascinating because at few other times across the course of human history, could a person of modest means potentially achieve great wealth. Though the quest for gold was not always easy for the 49ers, and not all of them achieved wealth, once they literally "staked their claims," each person had the same opportunity to achieve instant riches as the next. The Gold Rush was the great equalizer. Finding great stock trading opportunities is, in a way, like the 49ers' quest for gold, in that anybody-- whether young or old, rich or of modest means, male or female-- has a chance to create wealth for him or herself. But finding a shinny nugget at the bottom of your pan is one thing, while finding those select stocks that have the most explosive upside potential is quite another.
tock market analysis is the process of investigating and studying data on existing stocks and trying to predict how they will do in the stock market. This is used by most traders due to the fact that stock prices can change from moment to moment, but they normally have a pattern of either going up or down that can be analyzed and followed. Some investors use what is called technical analysis. This is mostly used to figure out the possible return the stock will provide its owners. When traders get tips on various stocks it is usually after this sort of analysis.
Multiple factors go into stock market analysis to see what sort of thing causes the prices to go up or down. Some of these factors include the business' background, the economy, historic trends, or even natural disasters like hurricanes or earthquakes. You can't use a system of stock market analysis over the long term, however, because it doesn't include any information on a business' future potential. But you can use it to keep track of the ups and downs of a particular stock.
Magee was talking about how the field of technical analysis developed, beginning with the early moving averages developed by Charles Dow dating all the way back in 1884. As I read, three things occurred to me: 1. First, some very smart people had been hot on the trail of finding a system of using charts to anticipate stocks' movements for a very long time. 2. Second, charts represented the only visual, factual record of a stock's movement that was not filtered through some financial news analyst or stock market guru. 3. Third, and most important, it actually seemed plausible to make reasonable assumptions, based upon certain charts, as to when a stock was nearing its greatest potential. Could I have finally found the "holy grail" to stock profits I had been searching for?
One more observation. If you can figure this out, let me know. The best stocks I have found have been in bear markets. True, you could buy just about anything in a bull market and be up, but the highest percentage gains in my book have been in bad markets. Not terrible markets, bad markets. I have never figured out why.
Head and Shoulders is yet another stock pattern. It means that the stock first comes to a peak (a shoulder), then gets lower and then forms another even higher peak (the head), and then goes up again, (another shoulder). A very popular stock analysis tool, this one reveals the stock's median cost within a certain timeframe. It is plotted on a chart so that traders can see what the stock's pattern is. This market analysis tool looks at a comparison of the amount of days a stock ends on a positive note and the amount of days it ends on a negative note. It is used over a specified amount of time, normally nine to 15 days. In order to use it, the traders divide the median amount of days the stock goes up by the median amount of days it goes down. The result is added to one and employed to divide 100. Then you subtract that result from 100 to get the stock's relative strength index. Depending on that amount, a trader can tell if a stock is strong or weak. This process uses the amount of shares that were traded plus the cost of the stock. If this number is high, you should sell your stock, but if it is below 30 you should buy more.
tock market analysis is the process of investigating and studying data on existing stocks and trying to predict how they will do in the stock market. This is used by most traders due to the fact that stock prices can change from moment to moment, but they normally have a pattern of either going up or down that can be analyzed and followed. Some investors use what is called technical analysis. This is mostly used to figure out the possible return the stock will provide its owners. When traders get tips on various stocks it is usually after this sort of analysis.
Multiple factors go into stock market analysis to see what sort of thing causes the prices to go up or down. Some of these factors include the business' background, the economy, historic trends, or even natural disasters like hurricanes or earthquakes. You can't use a system of stock market analysis over the long term, however, because it doesn't include any information on a business' future potential. But you can use it to keep track of the ups and downs of a particular stock.
Magee was talking about how the field of technical analysis developed, beginning with the early moving averages developed by Charles Dow dating all the way back in 1884. As I read, three things occurred to me: 1. First, some very smart people had been hot on the trail of finding a system of using charts to anticipate stocks' movements for a very long time. 2. Second, charts represented the only visual, factual record of a stock's movement that was not filtered through some financial news analyst or stock market guru. 3. Third, and most important, it actually seemed plausible to make reasonable assumptions, based upon certain charts, as to when a stock was nearing its greatest potential. Could I have finally found the "holy grail" to stock profits I had been searching for?
One more observation. If you can figure this out, let me know. The best stocks I have found have been in bear markets. True, you could buy just about anything in a bull market and be up, but the highest percentage gains in my book have been in bad markets. Not terrible markets, bad markets. I have never figured out why.
Head and Shoulders is yet another stock pattern. It means that the stock first comes to a peak (a shoulder), then gets lower and then forms another even higher peak (the head), and then goes up again, (another shoulder). A very popular stock analysis tool, this one reveals the stock's median cost within a certain timeframe. It is plotted on a chart so that traders can see what the stock's pattern is. This market analysis tool looks at a comparison of the amount of days a stock ends on a positive note and the amount of days it ends on a negative note. It is used over a specified amount of time, normally nine to 15 days. In order to use it, the traders divide the median amount of days the stock goes up by the median amount of days it goes down. The result is added to one and employed to divide 100. Then you subtract that result from 100 to get the stock's relative strength index. Depending on that amount, a trader can tell if a stock is strong or weak. This process uses the amount of shares that were traded plus the cost of the stock. If this number is high, you should sell your stock, but if it is below 30 you should buy more.
About the Author:
Frank Miller has a Debt Consolidation Blog & Finance, these are some of the articles: To Be Mr. And Mrs. Often You Need Wedding Loans You have full permission to reprint this article provided this box is kept unchanged.
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