Disclaimer: Not Financial Advice Using The Volume Profile as a tool for my Nava Imbalance Strategy, I have made 99% ROI time and time again! 1. How I Use Volume Profile Tool (From Last Major Swing To Present) Blue Lines = Immediate Support/Resistance (Range) - Best entry ZONES, Area to WAIT for BUY SETUPS - Best to wait for price to pass sup/res lines and...
RISING WEDGE PATTERN :- A rising wedge pattern is a chart formation in technical analysis that occurs when price rises in a narrowing range between two upward sloping trendlines. This pattern is often seen as a bearish indicator, suggesting that the security is likely to break out to the downside. When the falling wedge forms, it is typically accompanied by...
There are 2 types of edges in trading, a trading strategy edge and a trading psychology edge. You need to have both to succeed. This post will focus on how to develop your mental edge, which is the more important of the 2 types. The process of developing a trading psychology edge is simple, but usually not easy. Start trading Identify your...
There is one tool with trading, which you can accelerate your portfolio, compared to with investing. I’m talking about Gearing (or leverage). To wrap our head around this concept, here’s a more relatable life example. When you buy a house for R1,000,000, it is very similar to trading derivatives. Initially, the homeowner most probably won’t have the full...
What is the PE ratio? The price-to-earnings ratio or P/E is a financial ratio used to evaluate a company’s share. How is it calculated? Current market’s price / Earnings Per Share (EPS). Share price / EPS What does it show you? It shows you whether a company’s stock (based on its earnings) is: Overvalued or Undervalued. Also, it gives an indication on how...
So, let's refresh our knowledge from the previous posts (read part 1 and part 2 at the links): - The chart is based on the data from the tape; - The X-axis is the time scale, and the Y-axis is the price scale; - To avoid having to analyze a huge number of trades, interval charts were invented for convenience; - The most popular chart type is the Candlestick...
So, in the last post we learned how to build a simple line chart based on the tape. Each point on the chart is defined by coordinates from the time (X scale) and price (Y scale) of a trade. But some stocks are traded at a frequency of hundreds of trades per second, at different prices. The question arises: which trade price to choose from this set? Interval...
As we are expecting Steinhoff to delist soon. What if you continue holding shares in the company? From my experience when a company goes from listed to private it means a few things. 1. Liquidity issues Volume will be low where you might not be able to exit a position with a rightful buyer or sell 2. lack of transparency This leads to uncertainty for...
Last time we studied how the exchange price is formed, and we found out that it is important to learn how to read charts correctly in order to analyze price changes correctly. Let's see how a chart is made and what it can tell us. Everyone who went to school probably remembers: to draw a function, we need the X and Y axes. In stock charts, the X-axis is...
The previous parts of the post can be found at the links: Part 1 - How is the share price formed on the stock exchange? We do it Part 2 - Bid/Offer: The Yin and Yang of Stock Prices So, let's continue. So why don't we ever see some orders in the order book? Because such orders don't have a price, which means they can't be arranged in a book where all orders...
Read the first part of this post at the link: How is the share price formed on the stock exchange? We do it So at what price and what volume will the deal eventually be made? To understand this, let's go back to the "price" parameter of the order. When a buyer placed an order "to buy 25 lots at $115 a share", the exchange takes it as "to buy 25 lots at a price...
You already know that the stock exchange is a one-stop place to buy or sell stocks, whether you are a novice investor or a seasoned professional. But even if you don't trade stocks, you will still "come" to the stock exchange to find out stock prices. Let's find out how the exchange price of a stock is formed. Regardless of what country the stock exchange is in,...
Back in 1977, the still famous investment company Fidelity Investments entrusted the management of a small fund of $18 million to this very man. The next 13 years were impressive for the Magellan fund and its manager - the famous Peter Lynch. The fund's assets grew to $14 billion, more than doubling the average annual growth of the S&P500 stock index. When he...
Read the previous part of the post here . Having received only denials, the owner of the workshop decides the following: it would be great if shares were sold and bought not in the offices of banks, but in one single place - the stock exchange. Then those who want to vote would be able to buy as many shares as they need votes. Those who want a discount will wait...
Head and shoulder definition: A simple head and shoulders top formation is characterized by a peak representing the left shoulder, followed by a higher peak which is referred to as the head of the formation. A lower peak representing the right shoulder is found on the right‐hand side of the head. The head should be the highest peak in the formation. The...
So, here we go. Start of the story here . What next? How will he sell something that no one will buy in pieces? He turns his company into a joint-stock company, which is a form of company organization that allows it to be split into shares. Our owner issues 1 million shares, that is, he sort of divides the company into 1 million pieces. Then he calculates how...
Now let's talk about what a stock is, why companies issue them, and why they attract investors. To do this, imagine a story. Imagine a small shoe workshop with a single owner. Suppose he makes boots out of crocodile leather. His product is unique to the city and in demand, because these boots are very durable and comfortable. At this point, he can only produce...
I've mentioned the word "risk" many times before, and it really is a very important word in the investment process. Today I would like to focus on a risk that you should pay much attention to as a future investor: market risk, or in other words, the risk that you will have to sell the shares you bought cheaper than the price at which you bought them, and suffer a...