When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cup and handle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cup_and_handle

    Example of cup and handle chart pattern. In the domain of technical analysis of market prices, a cup and handle or cup with handle formation is a chart pattern consisting of a drop in the price and a rise back up to the original value, followed first by a smaller drop and then a rise past the previous peak. [1]

  3. Chart pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chart_pattern

    In stock and commodity markets trading, chart pattern studies play a large role during technical analysis. When data is plotted there is usually a pattern which naturally occurs and repeats over a period. Chart patterns are used as either reversal or continuation signals.

  4. Technical analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technical_analysis

    Open-high-low-close chart – OHLC charts, also known as bar charts, plot the span between the high and low prices of a trading period as a vertical line segment at the trading time, and the open and close prices with horizontal tick marks on the range line, usually a tick to the left for the open price and a tick to the right for the closing ...

  5. Island reversal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Island_reversal

    In both stock trading and financial technical analysis, an island reversal is a candlestick pattern with compact trading activity within a range of prices, separated from the move preceding it. [1] A "candlestick pattern" is a movement in prices shown graphically on a candlestick chart .

  6. Automated trading system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automated_trading_system

    The automated trading system determines whether an order should be submitted based on, for example, the current market price of an option and theoretical buy and sell prices. [7] The theoretical buy and sell prices are derived from, among other things, the current market price of the security underlying the option.

  7. Candlestick pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candlestick_pattern

    Some of the earliest technical trading analysis was used to track prices of rice in the 18th century. Much of the credit for candlestick charting goes to Munehisa Homma (1724–1803), a rice merchant from Sakata, Japan who traded in the Dojima Rice market in Osaka during the Tokugawa Shogunate. According to Steve Nison, however, candlestick ...

  8. Double top and double bottom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_top_and_double_bottom

    The formation is completed and confirmed when the price rises above the neck line, indicating that further price rise is imminent or highly likely. Most of the rules that are associated with double top formation also apply to the double bottom pattern. Volume should show a marked increase on the rally up while prices are flat at the second bottom.

  9. MIDAS technical analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIDAS_Technical_Analysis

    In finance, MIDAS (an acronym for Market Interpretation/Data Analysis System) is an approach to technical analysis initiated in 1995 by the physicist and technical analyst Paul Levine, PhD, [1] and subsequently developed by Andrew Coles, PhD, and David Hawkins in a series of articles [2] and the book MIDAS Technical Analysis: A VWAP Approach to Trading and Investing in Today's Markets. [3]