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Coppock Curve
MetaStock Indicator
The Coppock Curve was developed by Edwin Sedgwick Coppock in
1962. It was featured in the November 94 issue of Technical Analysis
of Stocks & Commodities, in the article "The Coppock Curve", written
by Elliot Middleton:
"We are creatures of habit. We judge the world relative to what
we have experienced. If we're shopping for a mortgage and rates have
been in the teens (as they were in the early 1980s) and then drop to
10%, we are elated. If, however, they've been at 8% and then rise to
10%, we are disappointed. It all depends on your perspective.
The principle of adaptation-level applies to how we judge our income
levels, stock prices and virtually every other variable in our
lives. Psychologically, relativity prevails..."
-- Taken from Stocks & Commodities, V. 12:11 (459-462): The
Coppock Curve by Elliott Middleton
The MetaStock formula for the Coppock Curve is:
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(MOV(ROC(MOV(C,22,S),250,%),150,E))/100 |
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Simplest Forms
The moving average is the simplest form of adaptation-level. Moving
average crossover rules accurately signal the onset of periods of
returns outside the norm, whether positive or negative. This makes
moving average crossovers useful to traders who want to get a boost
on entering or exiting stocks or funds.
The oscillator is also based on adaptation-level, although in a
slightly different way. Oscillators generally begin by calculating a
percentage change of current price from some previous price, where
the previous price is the adaptation-level or reference point. The
mind is attuned to percentage changes because they represent
returns. If you bought Microsoft Corp. stock (MSFT) at $50 and it
goes to $80, you make 60% before dividends. If you bought Berkshire
Hathaway (BRK) at $4,000 and it rises to $4,030, the same dollar
gain, you make 0.75% before dividends. It's the percentage change
that counts. Relativity again.
Coppock reasoned that the market's emotional state could be
determined by adding up the percentage changes over the recent past
to get a sense of the market's momentum (and oscillators are
generally momentum indicators ). So if we compare prices relative to
a year ago - which happens to be the most common interval - and we
see that this month the market is up 15% over a year ago, last month
it was up 12.5% over a year ago, and 10%, 7.5% and 5%, respectively,
the months before that, then we may judge that the market is gaining
momentum and, like a trader watching for the upward crossover of the
moving average, we may jump into the market."
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