|
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
Technical
Analysis is the way of predicting price changes of a financial
instrument by analyzing prior price movements and looking for
patterns and relationship in price history.
The basic premise of technical analysis is that the price
discounts all information available in the market and that
patterns in price movements tend to repeat
themselves.
SUPPORT &
RESISTANCE
Support and resistance
represent key junctures where the forces of supply and demand
meet. In the financial markets, prices are driven by excessive
supply (down) and demand (up). Supply is synonymous with
bearish, bears and selling. Demand is synonymous with bullish,
bulls and buying. As demand increases, prices advance and as
supply increases, prices decline. When supply and demand are
equal, prices move sideways as bulls and bears slug it out for
control.
What is SUPPORT?
Support is the price level at which demand is
thought to be strong enough to prevent the price from
declining further. The logic dictates that as the price
declines towards support and gets cheaper, buyers become more
inclined to buy and sellers become less inclined to sell. By
the time the price reaches the support level, it is believed
that demand will overcome supply and prevent the price from
falling below support.
 After a support level is
penetrated, it often becomes a resistance level; this is
because investors want to limit their losses and will sell
later, when prices approach the former level.
What is
RESISTANCE?
Resistance is the price level at which
selling is thought to be strong enough to prevent the price
from rising further. The logic dictates that as the price
advances towards resistance, sellers become more inclined to
sell and buyers become less inclined to buy. By the time the
price reaches the resistance level, it is believed that supply
will overcome demand and prevent the price from rising above
resistance.
 After a resistance level is
penetrated, it often becomes a support level; this is because
buyers who didn't buy at that price before it went up are now
willing to buy at that price.
The Concept of SUPPORT
and RESISTANCE is essential to understanding and
interpreting the markets. Just as a ball bounces when it hits
the floor or drops after being thrown to the ceiling, support
and resistance define natural boundaries for rising and
falling prices.
Buyers and sellers are constantly in
battle mode. Support defines that level where buyers are
strong enough to keep price from falling further. Resistance
defines that level where sellers are too strong to allow price
to rise further. Support and resistance play different roles
in up trends and downtrends. In an uptrend, support is where a
pullback from a rally should end. In a downtrend, resistance
is where a pullback from a decline should end.
Support
and resistance are created because price has memory. Those
prices where significant buyers or sellers entered the market
in the past will tend to generate a similar mix of
participants when price again returns to that level.
When price pushes above resistance, it becomes a new
support level. When price falls below support, that level
becomes resistance. When a level of support or resistance is
penetrated, price tends to thrust forward sharply as the crowd
notices the BREAKOUT and jumps in to buy or sell. When a level
is penetrated but does not attract a crowd of buyers or
sellers, it often falls back below the old support or
resistance. This failure is known as a FALSE BREAKOUT.
Support and resistance come in all varieties and
strengths. They most often manifest as horizontal price
levels. The length of time that a support or resistance level
exists determines the strength or weakness of that level. The
strength or weakness determines how much buying or selling
interest will be required to break the level. Also, the
greater volume traded at any level, the stronger that level
will be. Support and resistance exist in all time frames and
all markets. Levels in longer time frames are stronger than
those in shorter time frames.
FORINVEST
GROUP
- Your World of Investment Services
Copyright
©
2003-2010. All Rights Reserved
|