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Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Lesson
# 9
TECHNICAL
ANALYSIS Contd...
Technical
Indicators:
In
addition to charts, most
technical analysts use a
collection of technical indicators.
These
statistics,
either calculated or directly observed,
are alleged to have a
relationship with the
future
direction of overall stock
market or with an individual
security. Some
indicators
might
logically carry useful
information; others are
sufficiently far-fetched that
only the
most
creative analyst could
develop a caused and effect
relationship with the
market.
Indicators
with Economic
Justification:
Some
technical indicators are
based on economic activity
that is measurable and observable.
Fundamental
analyst also monitor economic
data, some economy based on
technical
indicators
receive special attention in the
marketplace. Many of these
based on logical
investment
mangers behavior, especially the
manager's likely reaction to
prior events.. A
few
of the most popular
technical indicators discussed
next.
Short
Interest:
A person
who sells stock short
believes that the share
price will decline. Eventually,
they
must
purchase stock in the open market to
replace the shares previously
burrowed. The
quantity
of share sold short at
anytime is periodically reported in
the financial press and
is
called
short
interest. Shares sold short
must
eventually be the covered
(bought). It
logically
follows that the higher
the short interest figure,
the larger is the potential
demand
for
shares.
The
technical analyst believes
that a large short interest
figure is bullish because of
the
potential
demand for the shares. The
short
interest ratio is
the number of days it
would
take to
cover the short interest if
trading continued at the
average daily trading volume
of
the
previous month.
Short
interest can also be used as an aggregate
market indicator. An indicator
based on the
behavior
of well-informed group of market
participants is called a smart
money indicator.
A
technical indicator that
prescribes actions opposing those of
the marketplace is a
contrary
opinion indicator.
Conversely,
some people believe the
small investor usually waits
too long to make a
decision
and consequently makes investment
decision that lag optimum
behavior. Odd lots
are
associated with the small
investor. If odd-lot short
sales begin to rise relative to
total
odd-lot
transactions, it may signal
the end of a market downturn
and, therefore, be a
bullish
signal.
A technical indicator that
prescribes actions opposing those of
the marketplace is a
contrary
opinion indicator.
Margin
Loans:
Another
contrary opinion indicator is
the margin loan indicator.
It measures the extent
to
which
market participants have
borrowed money to finance
their stock
transaction.
Increased
margin buying is historically
associated with rising
markets. Margin buying
often
65
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
speaks
just before market declines.
A technical analyst might
view this rising debt as
a
bearish
signal.
Increased
margin buying has historically
been associated with rising
markets.
Mutual
Fund Cash
Position:
Mutual
funds hold an enormous
quantity of stock in their
port folio. As a group,
the
investment
activities of mutual fund
managers can have a significant
influence on the
direction
of stock market prices. The
mutual
fund cash position measures
the proportion
of
total mutual fund assets
currently held in cash-equivalent
securities.
Many
fund managers seek to time
the market to some extent.
In other words, they
increase
their
purchases when they believe
conditions favor a market advance, and
hold cash when
they
believe the market is likely
to decline.
Cash
held by mutual funds represent
potential demand for stock in
much the same way
short
interest
does. Equity fund generally
find generally invests most
of its assets in
common
stock,
holding cash only
temporarily. The logic of
this technical indicator is
that when the
mutual
fund industry holds more
cash than normal, the
potential demand is bullish
signal
about
the future. Similarly, when
mutual funds are essentially
fully invested, the
potential
demand is
there, having already been
satisfied in the
marketplace.
Some
analyst believes that the
mutual fund cash position
normally ranges between 5
percent
and 15
percent. Because of the need
to satisfy shares redemption and
because of the
constant
arrival of new investment
funds from account holders,
a given mutual fund
never
lets
its cash balance get to zero.
Five percent or so is an effective
minimum in many
cases.
The
upper limit is subjective, as
fund manager differ substantially on
the percentage of
assets
they are willing to
temporarily remove from the
equity market.
Mutual
fund cash is potential demand
for stock.
Confidence
Index:
A
confidence index is a
ratio of yield on high grade
bonds (usually AAA) to yield on a
lower
grade bonds (usually BBB).
Because investors are risk
averse, riskier bonds yield
more
than safer bond, so this
ratio will always be less
than 1.0. To the advocate of
this ratio,
the
important thing is how close
the ratio is to the maximum
value 1.0.
By
definition, a BBB-rated bund carries
more default risk than
AAA-rated bond. An
investor's
willingness to take on more risk is
partially determined by the
investor's
expectations
about the future. Default is
probably more likely when
the economy is
expected to
turn down, with the
associated reduction in consumer demand
and product
sales,
conversely, a robust economy can
help a company generate cash
and overcome many
of
its corporate owes. When
the confidence index gets
closer to 1.0, investors are
more
likely
to be bullish about the
economy, and therefore about
corporate earnings. A
decline
index
may foretell an economic
downturn.
Advance-Decline
Line:
Every
trading day, some issues
advances, some declines and some
remains unchanged.
Advance-Decline
Line is a
graphical representation of the
net advances over a period
of
66
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
time.
Advances count as pluses, declines
are minuses and unchanged
securities count as
zero.
Relative
Strength Ratio:
Relative
Strength Ratio is a
method of comparing one statistic to
some benchmark
statistic.
Moving
Average:
A
Moving Average is a
smoothed presentation of underlying
historical data. Each
data
point
is the arithmetic average of a
portion of the previous
data. A ten-day moving
average
measures
the average over the
previous ten days.
Regardless of the time
period used, each
day a
new observation is included in
the calculation and the
oldest is dropped, so a constant
number
of points are always being
averaged.
Advocates
of moving average in the
stock selection believe that
changes in the slope of
the
line
are important. A stock whose
twenty-day moving average
has been trending up
might
become
a candidate for sale if the
line turns downward.
Closing
Thoughts on Indicators:
Marketing
statistics are an interesting
topic. Tools such as the
advance-decline line and
relative
strength figures my help
some people make decisions, but they
should not be more
than
that. Managers make decisions, not
black boxes or technical
indicators.
Fundamental
analysts and technical analyst
both use market indicators.
Indicators can help
present
data in a more intuitive way
and may suggest areas for
further investigation. It is
dangerous,
thought, to believe that a
collection of market indicators of
any kind will
function
as an oracle predicting future
movements of a stock or of the
overall market.
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