The Future of Investing



An Introduction to Technical Analysis

While a fundamental approach to valuing a share involves the use of financial and economic data, a technical analyst doesn't look at income statements, balance sheets, company policies, or anything fundamental about the company. Technical analysis looks at the actual history of trading and price in a security or index. This is usually done in the form of a chart. The security can be a stock, future, index, or a sector.

The technical analyst believes that securities move in trends. And these trends continue until something happens to change the trend.

With trends, patterns and levels are detectable. Sometimes the analysis is wrong. However, in the overwhelming majority of instances, it's extremely accurate.

The tools of the technical analyst are indicators and systems which are used on price charts. Moving averages, support and resistance lines, envelopes, Bollinger bands, momentum... are all examples of indicators. These indicators all tell a story.

In the past, technical analysis required powerful institutional computers and teams of mathematicians to interpret the signals. Now with modern software such as Paritech Charts Online, MetaStock, OmniTrader or Hot Trader and a home computer, the individual investor has access to the same information as the technical analysts of the large institutions.

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