To make investment decisions and analyze securities,
methods that fall into two very broad categories are used - the technical and fundamental analysis. While the
fundamental analysis examines the characteristics of a company to establish its value, the technical
analysis adopts a different approach. It does not concern itself with the value of a commodity or a company.
The price movement of the market is the only matter that interest the technicians.
Technical analysis just studies the demand and the supply in a market, attempting to determine what trends will
continue in the future. By studying the market itself, the technical analysis attempts to understand the market
trends, not its components. Understanding the benefits and the limitations of a technical analysis gives you a
set of skills and tools, enabling you to become a better investor or trader.
While there are known to exist many investment styles on the fundamental side, many different types of technical
traders exist, too.
Some employ technical indicators, others oscillators or chart patterns, but most use a combination of all. What
separates the technical analysis from the rest is the exclusive use of volume data and historical price.
Technical analysis does not concern itself with the information such as the stock
undervaluation, for example. The point that is taken into account is the past trading data of the security and
the type of information it can provide about the future movement of the security.
The assumptions of the technical analysis are based on:
1. Everything is discounted by the market.
2. Price moves in trends.
3. History repeats itself.
For any security that has historical trading data, the technical analysis may be applied. Futures, stocks, fixed
income securities, commodities, and traders are the predominant participants.
Free charting webinarMon, Nov 18th, 2013 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM ESTDuring the 60 minute session Paul Coghlan, founder of Coghlan Capital, looks at current charts for currencies, precious metals, US indices, highlighting turns and low risk entry points using the Median line analysis methodology. Median line analysis reduces risk and increases the chartists ability to see trend direction, trend
strength and highlight entry and exit levels. Seats are limited so be sure to reserve your spot today. The webinar will be recorded, by signing up you'll receive an email with the webinar replay afterwards. |