The chart isn't going to go directly up, or down. The second chart is 3 year weekly so all the bumps are taken out. There might be some consolidation sideways movement before a definate trend reappears. Might take a week or 4...chris1983 said:Well we can only tell tonight. A lot of investors who sold out will be hoping its a larger correction. If it starts pulling back up tomorrow after they got out today they will be quite sorry. It allready recovered quite a bit from the morning..so keep an eye out for people hammering the forums saying its not over. Atleast the Shanghai index showed recovery today. Its still going very strong considering its recent rises.
The way I look at it, selling today and missing out on gains tomorrow is an annoyance, but the funds are safe and more opportunities will arise. Not selling today and losing another packet tomorrow could prevent those future opportunities from being taken at all.chris1983 said:If it starts pulling back up tomorrow after they got out today they will be quite sorry
kennas said:Interesting, as in nice colours?Nice eh? I just love drawing these things. I should have done art at uni.
Yeah, I understand wave 3 supposed to be the longest, but I'm not sure about the never part. I've come to accept that T/A of any sort is all probabilities and never certainties. There's always exceptions to every rule. In fact, I couldn't say T/A is a rule anyway, it's just a guide. There's a whole bunch of charts out there that don't conform to support and resistance lines, fib, or EW in the slightest. But they would be the exceptions.
This longer term chart also shows a wave 5, with a couple of anomolies in it. The wave 3 is the longest here. Whatever the case, I think we're in for at least a 3 wave downward move in all probabilities. On this long term chart the A B C could take it down to 4800 ish, but I'm not that bearish. Yet.
GreatPig said:The way I look at it, selling today and missing out on gains tomorrow is an annoyance, but the funds are safe and more opportunities will arise. Not selling today and losing another packet tomorrow could prevent those future opportunities from being taken at all.
GP
It should come back to the mean at least in the next few months. It had moved about 15% away from the 200d ma as well, and each time it has moved away like this the past 3 years there has been a correction of about 8ish %. It's been due, and we've been saying that in this thread since early Jan. It's still got some way to go to be a healthy chart IMO, and that level is closer to 5400 than 6000. It's also bounced well off the 200d ma, so if it approacheds that again, I'd get set for some long positions if the economy is still sound.GreatPig said:Seems like the XAO is moving up a well defined channel now, since the bull run started in early '03.
That puts the bottom at just under 5400 right now.
Cheers,
GP
kennas said:It should come back to the mean at least in the next few months. It had moved about 15% away from the 200d ma as well, and each time it has moved away like this the past 3 years there has been a correction of about 8ish %. It's been due, and we've been saying that in this thread since early Jan. It's still got some way to go to be a healthy chart IMO, and that level is closer to 5400 than 6000. It's also bounced well off the 200d ma, so if it approacheds that again, I'd get set for some long positions if the economy is still sound.
Have you got software, or a program, that does this? I'll put it on the Christmas list.wavepicker said:Only trouble kennas is that "the mean" as you call it is not really a good representation of the actual mean. The current data point on your 200 MA is reflective of the 200 MA at 101 periods ago. So your current 200MA level should actually be aligned with price point of 101 periods back.
Only then you can really establish an accurate deviation away from a nominal level and as to whether the market is at high probability for a reversal or whether it will keep trending
Cheers
wavepicker said:Only trouble kennas is that "the mean" as you call it is not really a good representation of the actual mean. The current data point on your 200 MA is reflective of the 200 MA at 101 periods ago. So your current 200MA level should actually be aligned with price point of 101 periods back.
CanOz said:Is it relevant to use the channel trend lines on a 5 minute chart like this?
CanOz said:Can someone shed some light on my query please?
kennas said:Have you got software, or a program, that does this? I'll put it on the Christmas list.
morning wavepicker,wavepicker said:kennas,
most softwares will handle displacing of MA's either forward or back. Any softwares that enable you to write code and set up custom indicators are best ie :-
-Wealthlab
-MS
-Amibroker
-Excel
There are more as well but you gotta look for them
ASXGorilla
What I am saying is that the lag in the MA must be taken into consideration.
By allowing for the lag and moving the MA back in time (by how much depends on the type of MA you are using and it's span) we are then aligning the MA with price, MA's as used conventionally are out of phase with price due to the lag component.
From here you will see that when price crosses the MA it will move an equal distance in the opposite direction (from the MA) compared to the distance to the MA previously made before crossing the MA. This is especially the case in a sharp move. In many cases price is merely acting like a pedulum. By doing this we are calibrating the equilibrium of that pendulum.
Cheers
professor_frink said:morning wavepicker,
interesting thoughts
By that I mean, the MA won't arrive at the current price action until 'x' periods(whatever the displacement is) after the current bar.
Do just estimate where it wil be when it catches up? Or have I completely missed the point(something I'm quite good at)
Edwood said:Hi CanAU - you prob need a trend line along support, which would give a descending triangle - bearish continuation pattern. fwiw out of hours we're down to low 5,700's so appears to have played out as a bearish triangle anyway (with the benefit of hidsight mind!)
hope this helps!
Ed
http://stockcharts.com/school/doku....t_analysis:chart_patterns:descending_triangle
Sorry wavepicker, I probably should have put it slightly differentlywavepicker said:What you have just described above is what happens when using a MA in a conventional manner. However the way I have plotted the MA on the chart, the MA is reflective of the current price bar at that particular moment in time.
When corrected, you will see that the MA is no longer either above or below the price action as used in a conventional manner. Rather the MA is now "centered". When we have small deviations either way from the MA( a slower than normal rate of price change), this would suggest for the current trend to persist (Cycle is damped). When we have large deviation from the MA to an extreme(markets tend to reverse after a climax of some sort). The beauty of a market that has reached an extreme is that you can then estimate with reasonable accuracy where price will find either support or resistance in the subsequent move, because the subsequent move will move exactly the distance from the extreme point to the MA but in the opposite direction.
It should be stressed that this approach is very much to be used for taking contrarian positions. It is also hugely dependant on the span of the MA you decide to use(which in itself must be a close approximation of the dominant cycle)
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