Friday, October 16, 2009

Stock Swing Trading Charts

Our swing trading charts are based on the swing identification techniques made popular by William Dunnigan in his book One-Way Formula for Trading in Stocks and Commodities.

Unlike bar charts, these swing trading charts only show the pivot points of significant highs and lows. The high points are in green and lows in red. You can click on the points to see a display of the date it occurred, the value and rate per day of movement to that level. Up trends are identified by higher swing highs and higher swing lows. Down trends are just the reverse.

Also in this section you will find the following charts types. Click on these charts to see values.

Volatility Chart - these charts show volatility along with stock close prices
Option Implied Volatility Charts
6 Day Stock Historical Volatility
10 Day Stock Historical Volatility
20 Day Stock Historical Volatility
100 Day Stock Historical Volatility
Put/Call Ratio Charts - the put/call ratio is a contarian indicator. It signals a buy on a high value and a sell on a low value. On each chart there is a plot of buy/sell areas based on these highs and lows. You can use the standard, at-the-money, or weighted ratios.
Put/Call Volume Charts - shows the Put and Call volume ratio which is volume/200day average volume. You can use the standard, at-the-money, or weighted ratios.
Option and Stock Volatility Information
Here you will find the extremes reports listed below. This data can give you an indication of which options you should consider watching and trading. Options usually go to these extreme level for some significant reason that should be investigated to give you ideas of how to take advantage of the news. This data is only available to subscribers and is invaluable to option trading.

Implied and Historical Volatility Extremes Reports
Put/Call Ratio Extremes Reports
Put and Call Volume Extremes Reports
Stock Splits - Mergers and Acquisitions
In this section you will find information on pending and past stock splits, mergers and acquisitions, and distributions. These are all events that can impact both trade selection and management. This data is made available by many different exchanges, but we have collected it in one location for your convenience







.Information About Forex Trading Systems

What is a forex trading system?

A forex trading system is a set of indicators and commands that are supposed to be executed for a profit on the forex market. These systems are developed with knowledge in statistics and historical market behavior.

What should a good forex system have?

1. Proof - when developing a system, it's important to see whether it would have worked in the past. This is a crucial step in developing a system, since if it does not work on past data, it will probably not work on future data.

2. Reason - a good system should have a reason behind its mechanics. Although there are some systems that have weird, yet working logic, most systems need to have a good reason for its inner workings.

3. Ability to work on all common market conditions - good forex trading systems need to work on most market conditions: up, down, sideways, slow days, and fast days. A system that works only in one direction or under one condition may become useless when the market conditions change, and in the forex market those conditions change rapidly.

4. Technical support - common scam systems used to be sold with no technical support. If the user got stuck, it was his own problem. A good trading system has a good support support system behind it to answer any question and solve any problem that may be encountered.

No comments:

Post a Comment