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Technical Analysis.ppt
1. Lecture Presentation Software
to accompany
Investment Analysis and
Portfolio Management
Seventh Edition
by
Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown
Chapter 16
2. Chapter 16
Technical Analysis
Questions to be answered:
• How does technical analysis differ from
fundamental analysis?
• What are the underlying assumptions of
technical analysis?
• What major assumption causes a difference
between technical analysis and the efficient
market hypothesis?
3. Chapter 16
Technical Analysis
• What are the major advantages of technical
analysis compared to fundamental analysis?
• What are the major challenges to the
assumptions of technical analysis and its rules?
• What is the logic for the major contrary
opinion rules used by technicians?
4. Chapter 16
Technical Analysis
• What are some of the significant rules used by
technicians who want to follow the smart
money and what is the logic of those rules?
• What are the breadth of market measures and
what are they intended to indicate?
• What are the types of price movements
postulated in the Dow Theory and how are they
used by a technician?
5. Chapter 16
Technical Analysis
• Why do technicians consider the volume of
trading important and how do they use it in
their analysis?
• What are support and resistance levels, how
are they identified, and how are they used by
technicians?
• What is the purpose of moving average lines
and how does the technician use one or several
of them to detect major changes in trends?
6. Chapter 16
Technical Analysis
• What is the rationale behind the relative
strength line for an industry or a stock and
how is it interpreted?
• How are bar charts different from point-and-
figure charts?
• What are some uses of technical analysis in
foreign security markets?
• How is technical analysis used when analyzing
bond markets?
7. Underlying Assumptions
of Technical Analysis
1. The market value of any good or service is
determined solely by the interaction of
supply and demand
2. Supply and demand are governed by
numerous factors, both rational and
irrational
8. Underlying Assumptions
of Technical Analysis
3. Disregarding minor fluctuations, the prices
for individual securities and the overall
value of the market tend to move in trends,
which persist for appreciable lengths of
time
4. Prevailing trends change in reaction to
shifts in supply and demand relationships
and these shifts can be detected in the action
of the market
9. Advantages of Technical Analysis
• Not heavily dependent on financial
accounting statements
– Problems with accounting statements:
1. Lack information needed by security analysts
2. GAAP allows firms to select reporting
procedures, resulting in difficulty comparing
statements from two firms
3. Non-quantifiable factors do not show up in
financial statements
10. Advantages of Technical Analysis
• Fundamental analyst must process new
information and quickly determine a new
intrinsic value, but technical analyst merely
has to recognize a movement to a new
equilibrium
• Technicians trade when a move to a new
equilibrium is underway but a fundamental
analyst finds undervalued securities that
may not adjust their prices as quickly
11. Challenges to Technical Analysis
• Assumptions of Technical Analysis
– Empirical tests of Efficient Market Hypothesis
(EMH) show that prices do not move in trends
• Technical Trading rules
– The past may not be repeated
– Patterns may become self-fulfilling prophecies
– A successful rule will gain followers and become
less successful
– Rules require a great deal of subjective judgement
12. Technical Trading Rules
and Indicators
• Stock cycles typically go through a peak
and trough
• Analyze the following chart of a typical
stock price cycle and we will show a rising
trend channel, a flat trend channel, a
declining trend channel, and indications of
when a technical analyst would want to
trade
14. Typical Stock Market Cycle
Stock
Price
Exhibit 16.2
Declining
Trend
Channel
Trough
Buy Point
Rising Trend
Channel
Flat Trend Channel
Sell Point
Peak
Declining
Trend
Channel
Trough
Buy Point
15. Contrary-Opinion
• Many analysts rely on rules developed from
the premise that the majority of investors
are wrong as the market approaches peaks
and troughs
• Technicians try to determine whether
investors are strongly bullish or bearish and
then trade in the opposite direction
• These positions have various indicators
16. Contrary-Opinion Rules
• Mutual fund cash positions
• Credit balances in brokerage accounts
• Investment advisory opinions
• OTC versus NYSE volume
• Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)
put/call ratio
• Futures traders bullish on stock index
futures
17. Follow the Smart Money
• Indicators showing behavior of
sophisticated investors
• The Barron’s Confidence Index
• T-Bill - Eurodollar yield spread
• Short sales by specialists
• Debit balances in brokerage accounts
(margin debt)
18. Other Market Indicators
• Breadth of market
– Advance-decline
– Diffusion index
• Short interest
• Stocks above their 200-day moving average
• Block uptick-downtick ratio
19. Stock Price and Volume Techniques
• The Dow theory – oldest technical trading
rule
– 1. Major trends are like tides in the ocean
– 2. Intermediate trends resemble waves
– 3. Short-run movements are like ripples
• Importance of volume
– Ratio of upside-downside volume
• Support and resistance levels
• Moving average lines
20. Stock Price and Volume Techniques
• Relative-strength (RS) ratios
– For individual stocks and industry groups
• Bar charting
• Multiple indicator charts
• Point-and-figure charts
• Overall feel from a consensus of
numerous technical indicators
21. Technical Analysis
of Foreign Markets
• Foreign stock market series
• Technical analysis of foreign
exchange rates
• Technical analysis of bond markets