Bring Wall Street to you...Many work at home programs with the Wall Street feel....
Sunday, May 20, 2012
He has designed over a dozen analytical stock market software systems.
The moving average is not as glamorous as many of the new indicators and specialized indices that mathematicians around the globe are clamoring to create however the moving average you can be sure is still one of the most important indicators you can use. After all, isn’t past performance the best indicator of future success?
Before we delve too far into an argument supporting the use of the moving average a bit of discussion regarding a description of how the indicator works is necessary. A moving average is simply that, an average of the price of a stock over a set period of time. The benefit of using an average of the prices rather than the actual prices is the smoothing factor the average calculation incorporates into the result. By averaging the prices the impression of unusual price spikes or sudden drops are diminished and what emerges is a more stable or less volatile trend of a stock price’s history.
The smoothing benefit of the average has more of an impact over longer periods of time as should be expected. The more data points that are averaged then the greater the weight of the most common price trends. So longer period averages a popular one being 200 days for instance tend to result in much smoother lines than shorter averages. In a sense the longer term averages can be seen as representing a company’s long term potential, based on their historical performance and short term averages their daily or weekly trends.
The study of comparing short term moving averages against long term moving averages is probably the most common approach to using the moving average indicator. In fact one of the most popular traditional indicators the MACD (Moving Average Convergence/Divergence) is based on comparisons of short term versus long term moving averages. There are some distinctions between the calculation of the MACD and comparing short term versus long term moving averages however the principle is essentially the same. The difficult part is interpreting what the averages tell you about the stock’s performance. Essentially the question is always: Does a short term average cross over a long term line signal a new break out for the stock or will the short term trend fall back in line with the longer term trend? It’s not fool proof, you still have to make your own assessments, but the indicator can help you.
Traditionally most analysis of short term versus long term averages considers crosses, where the short term average line crosses over the long term line to most often indicate a new future trend of a stock. In other words, meaning that the longer term average will follow the direction of the shorter term moving average. In reality however this is not always the case. Often short term averages will cross the long term average only to fall back into line with the long term trend. Only you can determine which average indicates the true direction the stock price will take. At this point, often supporting information such as news or quarterly financial releases are used to assist in determining if the short term moving average trend is merely a market driven change or if it reflects a basis for the increased value of the company.
There are some analysts that not only focus on short term versus long term crosses of the moving average but that also take the “steepness” of the cross into consideration. Steep or sharp dramatic crosses in this case are often seen as being strong market direction indicators signaling a future change in the price trend. If you test this with a real chart at http://www.stockrageous.com , and select the short term 20 over the long term 200 average which is the traditional standard for short versus long term average cross analysis in a five year chart you will note the impact of steep crosses in almost any stock.
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short term,
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stock market,
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trend
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