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Week 6

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Week 6 Technical Analysis Technical Analysis Attempt to exploit recurring and predictable patterns in stock prices to generate abnormal trading profits. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Week 6


1
Week 6
  • Technical Analysis

2
Technical Analysis
  • Attempt to exploit recurring and predictable
    patterns in stock prices to generate abnormal
    trading profits.
  • Stock market moves in trends which are determined
    by the changing attitudes of investors to a
    variety of economic, monetary, political and
    psychological forces.
  • Identify changes in trends at an early stage and
    Maintain an investment until a reversal of that
    trend is indicated.
  • Technicians believe
  • Shifts in market fundamentals can be discerned
    before the impact is fully reflected in prices.
  • Fundamentals can be perturbed by irrational
    factors.
  • When there is a shift in market fundamentals,
    price adjustment to a new equilibrium is gradual,
    leading recognizable trend.

3
Technical Analysis
  • The presumptions in technical analysis are not
    consistent with EMH.
  • Exploitable trends in stock prices would be the
    evidence against EMH, as they would indicate
    profit opportunities that market participants had
    left unexploited.
  • The notion of evolving patterns is consistent
    with almost but not-quite efficient markets.
  • There are patterns in stock prices that can be
    exploited, but once investors identify and
    attempt to profit from these patterns, their
    trading activities affect prices, thereby
    altering prices.
  • The patterns that characterize the stock prices
    will be constantly evolving, and only the best
    analysts who can identify new patterns earliest
    will be rewarded.

4
Charting The Dow Theory
  • A technique that attempts to discern long- and
    short-term trends in stock market prices.
  • Two indicators used
  • DJIA Key indicator of underlying trends
  • DJTA Indicator for confirming or rejecting the
    signal
  • Three forces that simultaneously affect stock
    prices
  • Primary trend Long-term movements of prices
    (several month to several years)
  • Secondary or intermediate trends Short-term
    deviations of prices from the underlying trend
    line, which are eliminated via corrections toward
    trend values.
  • Tertiary or minor trends Daily fluctuations of
    little importance.

5
Charting The Dow Theory
  • Support and resistance levels in stock prices
  • Support level A value below which a stock or
    stock index is relatively unlikely to fall.
  • Resistance level A value above which a stock or
    stock index is difficult to rise.
  • Support and resistance levels are determined by
    the recent history of stock prices.
  • Piercing the resistance level is a bullish
    signal.
  • Piercing the support level is a bearish signal.
  • Technicians see these levels as resulting from
    common psychological investor traits.
  • The contradictory signal between DJIA and DJTA
    (nonconfirmation by DJTA) is a warning sign.

6
Charting The Dow Theory
  • EMH and the Dow theory
  • The EMH holds that if any pattern is exploitable,
    many investors attempt to profit from such
    predictability, which would ultimately move
    prices and cause trading strategy to
    self-destruct.
  • Recent variations on the Dow theory
  • The Elliott wave theory Stock prices can be
    described by a set of wave patterns By
    interpreting the long- and short-term cycles, one
    can predict broad movements.
  • The theory of Kondratieff waves Macroeconomy
    (stock market) moves in broad waves lasting
    between 48 and 60 years.

7
Charting Other Techniques
  • Point and figure chart
  • Simply trace significant upward or downward
    movements in stock prices without regard to their
    timing.
  • It is customary to require reasonably substantial
    price changes before marking pluses or minuses.
  • Sell (buy) signals are generated when the stock
    price penetrates previous lows (highs).
  • Candlestick chart
  • The box with the vertical line drawn through it
    allows to ascertain the open and close price for
    the day, as well as the high and low price.
  • If the price increases during the day, the box is
    shaded.
  • The chart conveys a considerable amount of
    information about recent stock price history.

8
Charting Warning
  • Unfortunately, it is possible to perceive
    patterns that really do not exist.
  • The simulated data from a random number generator
    (patternless by construction) can display the
    pattern that is very similar to a pattern in the
    real stock prices.
  • Data mining
  • After the fact, you can always find patterns and
    trading rules that would have generated big
    profits If you test enough rules, some will have
    worked in the past.
  • Unfortunately, picking a theory that would have
    worked after the fact carries no guarantee of
    future success.
  • In evaluating trading rules, you should always
    ask whether the rule would have seemed reasonable
    before you looked at the data.

9
Technical Indicators
  • Sentiment Indicators
  • Measure the expectations of various groups of
    investors, for example, mutual fund managers,
    corporate insiders, or NYSE specialists.
  • Flow of funds indicators
  • Measure the potential for various investor groups
    to buy or sell stocks in order to predict the
    price pressure from those actions.
  • Market structure indicators
  • Monitor price trends and cycles.
  • Examples Charting techniques.

10
Sentiment Indicators
  • Trin Statistic
  • Market volume can measure the strength of a
    market rise or fall Market advances (reversals)
    are considered more bullish (bearish) when
    associated with increased trading volume.
  • Trin Number Advancing / Number Declining
  • Volume Advancing / Volume Declining
  • Volume Declining / Number
    Declining
  • Volume Advancing / Number Advancing
  • Average Volume in Declining Issues
  • Average Volume in Advancing Issues
  • Ratios above 1.0 are considered bearish because
    the falling stocks would have higher average
    volume than advancing stocks, indicating net
    selling pressure.

11
Sentiment Indicators
  • Odd-Lot Trading
  • An odd lot is a transaction of fewer than 100
    shares.
  • Odd-lot traders are almost always small
    individual traders.
  • The odd-lot theory
  • Small investors tend to miss key market turning
    points, typically buying stocks a bull market has
    already run its course and selling too late into
    a bear market.
  • When odd-lot traders are widely buying, you
    should sell and vice versa.
  • The ratio of odd-lot purchases to sales which is
    above 1.0 indicates the bearish market because
    small traders are net buyers.

12
Sentiment Indicators
  • Confidence Index
  • Presumption Actions of bond traders reveal
    trends that will emerge soon in the stock market.
  • The ratio of the average yield on 10 top-rated
    corporate bonds divided by the average yield on
    10 intermediate-grade corporate bonds Always
    below 100.
  • The higher values are bullish signal because
    default premium on lower rated bonds will be
    smaller when bond traders are optimistic about
    the economy.
  • Put/Call Ratio
  • The ratio of outstanding put options to
    outstanding call options Typically, about 65.
  • Deviations of the ratio from historical norm can
    be a signal of market sentiment and predictive of
    market movements.

13
Sentiment Indicators
  • Put/Call Ratio
  • Increase in the ratio as Bearish Growing
    interest in puts as a hedge against market
    declines.
  • Contrarian investors would consider an increase
    in the ratio as a signal of a buy opportunity, as
    they believe that a good time to buy is when the
    rest of the market is bearish.
  • Mutual Fund Cash Positions
  • Presumption Mutual funds act incorrectly before
    a market turning points Become more bullish and
    hold lower cash position (fully invested) when
    the market is at, or near, a peak.
  • The percentage of cash held in mutual fund
    portfolios is one common measure of sentiment
    This percentage moves in the opposite direction
    of the stock market.

14
Flow of Funds Indicators
  • Short Interest
  • Total number of shares currently sold short in
    the market.
  • High levels of short interest can be interpreted
    as bullish, some as bearish.
  • Bullish All short sales must be covered,
    suggesting short interest represents latent
    future demand for the stocks.
  • Bearish Short sellers tend to be larger, more
    sophisticated investors, and increased short
    interest reflects bearish sentiment of those
    investors.
  • Credit Balances in Brokerage Accounts
  • Investors with brokerage accounts often leave
    balances when they plan to invest in the near
    future.
  • Credit balances may be viewed as measuring the
    potential for new stock purchases High balances
    - Bullish sign.

15
Market Structure Indicators
  • Moving Averages
  • Moving average of a stock index is the average
    level of index over a given interval of time.
  • 52-week moving average Each week, the moving
    average is recomputed using index values of most
    recent 52-week.
  • After a period in which prices have generally
    been falling, the moving average will be above
    the current price (the moving average averages in
    the older and higher prices).
  • When the current price breaks through the moving
    average line from below A bullish sign A shift
    from a falling trend (with prices below the
    moving average) to a rising trend (with prices
    above the moving average).
  • When the current price breaks through the moving
    average line from above A bearish sign.

16
Market Structure Indicators
  • Breadth
  • A measure of the extent to which movement in a
    market index is reflected widely in the price
    movements of all the stocks in the market.
  • The most common measure Spread between the
    number of stocks that advance and decline in
    price.
  • If advances outnumber decline by a wide margin,
    the market is viewed as being stronger.
  • Some analysts cumulate breadth data each day.
  • The cumulative breadth for each day That days
    net advances (or declines) Previous days
    total.
  • The direction of cumulative breadth is used to
    identify broad market trends.

17
Market Structure Indicators
  • Relative Strength
  • A measure of the extent to which a security has
    outper-formed or underperformed either the market
    as a whole or its particular industry.
  • The most common measure Ratio of the price of
    the security to a price index for the industry.
  • A rising ratio implies the stock has been
    outper-forming the rest of industry.
  • If relative strength can be assumed to persist
    over time, this would be a signal to buy stock.
  • The relative strength of an industry relative to
    the whole market can be computed for tracking the
    ratio of the industry price index to the market
    price index.

18
Value Line System
  • Value Line System is widely followed by investors
    and displays the evidence of superior
    performance.
  • Value Line ranks stocks on a timeliness scale of
    one (best buy expected to perform the best) to
    five (sell expected to perform the worst).
  • The evidence shows that the different groups
    perform just as the rankings predict.
  • Value Line System is predominately a technical
    system.
  • The ranking procedure has three components
    relative earnings momentum, earnings surprise,
    and value index.
  • Points assigned for each factor determine the
    stocks overall ranking.
  • Value Line System is difficult to implement in
    market Underperformance of Value lines mutual
    fund.

19
Technical Analysis in Efficient Markets
  • Self-destructing Patterns
  • The idea behind the technical analysis is
    inconsistent with EMH.
  • The real test of EMH Whether a technical rule
    that seems to work will continue to work in the
    future (that, is become reflected in stock
    prices) once it becomes widely recognized
    Self-destructing.
  • Market dynamic Search for profitable trading
    rules ? Destruction ? Another search for
    yet-discovered rules.
  • Modern View of Technical Analysis
  • Prices reveal and reflect information and become
    useful to traders.
  • This view can reconcile technical analysis with
    the usual assumption of rational traders
    participating in efficient markets.
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