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Introduction to Online Trading

Stock Charts
Line Chart
Bar Chart
Candle Sticks
Reference Chart

Technical Indicators
Moving Average
Bollinger Band
RSI
K/D
MACD

Technical Trading Strategy
Moving Average Crosses
Candle Stick Trend Reversal
Head and Shoulder
Range Breakout
Triangle Breakout
Cup-With-A-Handle
Triple Top/Bottom
Stochastic Combo

Market Neutral Strategy
Why does the strategy work?
Historical Test
Convergence Pairtrade
Divergence Pairtrade

Artificial Intelligence Applied to Stock Trading
Live Technical Stock Search
Live Stock Comments
Neural Network Forecast
Fundamental Analysis

Risk Management
Performance Benchmark
Value At Risk (VAR)
Hedging
Singe Trade Risk Management
Portfolio Risk Management

Trading Screens on the Internet

Execution Skill
Trader’s Torment: Bid/Ask Spread
Demand and Supply at a Glance: Bid/Ask Sizes
Limit, Market and Stop Orders
1/16 Makes All the Difference

Trading and Investing

How to Be a Successful Investor

Glossary

   
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Technical Trading Strategies

Technical analysts and traders believe that certain stock chart patterns and shapes are signals for profitable trading opportunities. Many professional and amateur traders claim that they consistently make trading profits by following those signals. In this chapter we introduce eight types of stock patterns and the corresponding trading strategies, that, according to our extensive historical tests, give the trader an advantage.

Range Breakout

The figure below shows an example of a typical Range Breakout pattern.

Figure 16. A typical Range Breakout pattern, a strong buy signal. Note that the stock price breaks out of the trading range defined by the two range lines with large volume.

The trading strategy for a Range Breakdown is just the opposite that of Head and- Shoulders:it indicates a strategy of selling as the stock breaks the lower range line with larger-than-average volume, and continuing to hold until the stock has fallen a distance comparable to the height of the range. If the price goes up instead, one should stop losses as it penetrates the lower range line.

Figure 17. This is a typical Range Breakdown with large volume, a strong sell signal.

The trading strategy for a Range Breakdown is just the opposite: sell as the stock breaks the lower range line with larger than average volume, and continue to hold until the stock has fallen a distance comparable to the height of the range. If the price goes up instead, one should stop loss as it penetrates the lower range line.

 

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