Stock analysis and Technical analysis
 

List of Medium Term Technical Analysis Indicators

Medium Term Technical Analysis Indicators 

  • Polls and transactional indicators.

  • Put/call ratios (total options). High ratios signal market bottoms, low ratios market tops. Using a 10-day moving average, a reading of 1.0 or above is bullish, under 0.6 is bearish.

  • Put/call ratios (index and equity options individually). Using a 10- day moving average of the S&P 100 OEX, 1.30 and above is bullish, under 0.9 is bearish. For equity options, 0.65 or higher is bullish, 0.35 or lower is bearish.

  • Option premiums. Using a four week moving average of the total put premium divided by the total call premium for equities and indexes as reported by the ICC, under 0.5 is bearish, and above 1.5 is bullish.

  • Large block statistics. A rising 10- day moving average of the ratio of politicks to down ticks is considered positive and vice versa.

  • Corporate insider activity. An eight-week average ratio of sells to buys (as reported by Vickers) of 3:1 is bearish. A ratio under 1.25:1 is bullish.

  • Relative volume. Daily volume in the OCT market relative to daily volume on the NYSE. Peaks in the market tend to correspond with peaks in this ratio.

  • Relative price. Divide the S&P low grade index by the S&P high-grade index (both found in S&P’s Outlook). The ratio rises during bull markets and declines during bear markets.

  • Average price of most active list. It tends to get low at market tops and high at market bottoms.

  • Volume in 30 Dow stocks versus the NYSE. The ratio tends to go down as the market goes up and up as the market goes down.
 

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