I've found no one saying the things you've said, and no one explains with such a greatness as you. Great video. I'd rather fundamental analysis, though.
This is a great video, though the bit at the end falls apart: Regarding candlestick charts, these usually do not bear (pun intended) labels; thus, one could not immediately decipher whether the opening or the closing price was higher. To facilitate interpretations, the bodies of the candlesticks are shaded: When the chart is displayed in black-and-white, a black fill-in indicates closing lower than opening, and a white states closing higher (i.e., black is "bearish," and white "bullish"). When made in color, red corresponds to black (market closed lower than it opened), and green to white (market closed higher than it opened). (I never have encountered blue-fill-in charts.)
PBowyer123 - yes charting techniques can be applied in share, foreign exchange and commodity markets. However as an investor it's best to specialise and get good at one market rather than try and become a good chartist across different asset classes. Tim.
I use moving averages myself with the pipdaq setups and have to say that's all you need. It's best not to go the wrong route that many do thinking more indicators and technical analysis the better as it's not true.
I understand that supply and demand changes the prices of stocks but what i'm curious about is, Who or what is taking into account of ALL the buyers and sellers for this specific stock and CONSTANTLY updating and changing the price every second of every moment of every year? I would assume that computers are doing this but where are these computers? In banks? Across the globe? Who owns these computers? Who is updating the prices?
Luka Henigman seems right these exchanges in turn work with all the other exchanges throughout the world that share the same listed companies and any price discrepancies are immediately taken advantage of by profit hungry arbitrageurs which quickly closes the gap in price difference.
i think it's also how the market makers have their strategies/algorithms set. all the stocks have bid and ask prices and associated volumes, and i think based on that, the price moves to best fit this ratio. kinda lika a bidding house, but where there are computers/algorithms, people, buying and selling at the same time. and when you're trading, you're doing so through a broker. and there might be slightly different prices at different brokers.
Thanks for all your videos they are really helpful. I have one question about this technical analysis.. Do these techniques apply to all markets and equities?
If you’ve ever tried to chase price when it bounds away to the upside, only to suffer the inevitable loss when it just as quickly reverses, you will want the secret of the pop and stop trade in your trader’s arsenal.
The supporters of technical analysis forget that market's aren't efficient, never has been and probably never will be. Instead they're being driven by people, who aren't perfect and often make decisions based on emotions and biases rather than fully rational analysis.
DWL it is like saying the French accent is difficult to understand when listening to French. Britain is the home of the English language if you cant understand it chances are you have not mastered the language. Mind you there is no homogenous British accent and varies from the south in England to the north in Scotland.
I have found a website where you Learn free technical analysis, find informative stock market articles, get financial news, know the stockpicks, do your own chart analysis in traderstrainingzone
I'm an experienced teacher and this guy is the best teacher I've ever seen...
Explained simply. Perfect.
I've found no one saying the things you've said, and no one explains with such a greatness as you. Great video.
I'd rather fundamental analysis, though.
This is a great video, though the bit at the end falls apart: Regarding candlestick charts, these usually do not bear (pun intended) labels; thus, one could not immediately decipher whether the opening or the closing price was higher. To facilitate interpretations, the bodies of the candlesticks are shaded: When the chart is displayed in black-and-white, a black fill-in indicates closing lower than opening, and a white states closing higher (i.e., black is "bearish," and white "bullish"). When made in color, red corresponds to black (market closed lower than it opened), and green to white (market closed higher than it opened). (I never have encountered blue-fill-in charts.)
The way you explained it is so easy to understand. I'm only beginning my trading career and this really helped a lot!
InstaBlaster...
this guy is very good
PBowyer123 - yes charting techniques can be applied in share, foreign exchange and commodity markets. However as an investor it's best to specialise and get good at one market rather than try and become a good chartist across different asset classes. Tim.
I use moving averages myself with the pipdaq setups and have to say that's all you need. It's best not to go the wrong route that many do thinking more indicators and technical analysis the better as it's not true.
Another really helpful video, thank you!
Great explanation of a moving average !
"So, how many ways are there to analyse a stock. Fundamentally there are two" lol 10 years later someone got the joke :)
Easy to understand to the average individual
I understand that supply and demand changes the prices of stocks but what i'm curious about is, Who or what is taking into account of ALL the buyers and sellers for this specific stock and CONSTANTLY updating and changing the price every second of every moment of every year? I would assume that computers are doing this but where are these computers? In banks? Across the globe? Who owns these computers? Who is updating the prices?
Jake Smith the Stock Exchange.
Luka Henigman
seems right
these exchanges in turn work with all the other exchanges throughout the world that share the same listed companies and any price discrepancies are immediately taken advantage of by profit hungry arbitrageurs which quickly closes the gap in price difference.
i think it's also how the market makers have their strategies/algorithms set. all the stocks have bid and ask prices and associated volumes, and i think based on that, the price moves to best fit this ratio. kinda lika a bidding house, but where there are computers/algorithms, people, buying and selling at the same time. and when you're trading, you're doing so through a broker. and there might be slightly different prices at different brokers.
Thanks for all your videos they are really helpful. I have one question about this technical analysis..
Do these techniques apply to all markets and equities?
Very interesting, thanks a lot
Enrico Saccheggiani
Italy
Reminds me of box and whiskers
If you’ve ever tried to chase price when it bounds away to the upside, only to suffer the inevitable loss when it just as quickly reverses, you will want the secret of the pop and stop trade in your trader’s arsenal.
I use MarketXLS for this and it works great.
The supporters of technical analysis forget that market's aren't efficient, never has been and probably never will be. Instead they're being driven by people, who aren't perfect and often make decisions based on emotions and biases rather than fully rational analysis.
You can build a fundamentally correct portfolio or you can make money.
Hi thanks for the helpful video, just so you know, the link to your website is broken
+Anthony Stec Thanks Anthony, this should be back to normal now.
+MoneyWeek no problem :)
Where can I access candlestick charts for free? Google and Yahoo Finance do no seem to use them? Many thanks.
Pipthagoras investing.com
British accent is so difficult to undertand: but yur videos are very useful
DWL it is like saying the French accent is difficult to understand when listening to French. Britain is the home of the English language if you cant understand it chances are you have not mastered the language. Mind you there is no homogenous British accent and varies from the south in England to the north in Scotland.
I think its the echo of the room that distorts his voice but other than that his accent is perfectly fine.
I tend to understand the american one better, don't know why though
probs because they tend to have less variety of accents, empahsise their vowels more and have higher pitched voices (on the whole).
candle sticks also called as Bollinger bands
Sundar Balaji no, bollinger bands is a trading concept, candlesticks is a chart type
I have found a website where you Learn free technical analysis, find informative stock market articles, get financial news, know the stockpicks, do your own chart analysis in traderstrainingzone