Bloomberg - Technical Analysis Handbook PDF
Bloomberg - Technical Analysis Handbook PDF
Bloomberg - Technical Analysis Handbook PDF
Technical analysis has been used for hundreds of years. It can be applied to any market, an
advantage over fundamental analysis. Technicians believe that the study of market action will tell
all and that each and every fundamental aspect will be revealed through the actions of investors
entering or exiting positions. Market action includes many sources of information -- price, volume,
open interest, and volatility. Technical analysis is based upon three main premises;
To design charts with multiple studies, settings, and customization, youll find the most value in
G<GO>. The main menu or yellow key for custom charting is GRAPH<GO>, of which G<go> is
accessible via the column on the left.
Technical analysis has been proven to be an effective tool for investors and is constantly becoming
more accepted by market participants. When used in conjunction with fundamental analysis,
technical analysis can offer a more complete valuation, which can make the difference in executing
profitable trades.
For more detailed literature on technical analysis, two recommended textbooks are: Technical
Analysis of the Financial Markets, John J. Murphy and Technical Analysis Explained, Martin J.
Pring, 3rd Edition.
Table of Contents
The Basics
Page Page
2 GRAPH<go> 12 Candle Charts
4 G<go> 14 Logarithmic Charts
6 Custom Chart Types 16 Annotations
8 Line Chart 18 Trend Line Rules and Types
10 Bar Chart 20 Calculation Annotations
Technical Indicators
Page Page
22 Accumulation Distribution Oscillator 44 Erlanger Put / Call Ratio
24 Auto Regression Bands 46 Erlanger Trend Direction
26 Average True Range 48 Fibonacci Studies
28 Bloomberg Fear & Greed 50 General Overview Chart (Ichimoku)
30 Bloomberg Trender 52 Hurst Exponent (Chaos Theory)
32 Bollinger Bands 54 Inter-Period Moving Average
34 Candlestick Patterns 56 Keltner Bands
36 Chaikin Oscillator 58 Market Picture
38 Commodity Channel Index 60 Max/Min
40 DeMarkTM Indicators 62 McClellan Oscillator
42 Directional Movement Indicator (DMI) 64 Momentum
Technical Indicators
Page Page
66 Money Flow 88 Rate of Change
68 Moving Averages 90 Regression Bands
70 Moving Average Convergence/Divergence 92 Relative Strength Analysis
72 Moving Average Envelopes 94 Relative Strength Index
74 Moving Average Oscillator 96 Rex Oscillator
76 On-Balance Volume 98 Stochastics
78 Opening Range 100 Volume Interpretation
80 Parabolic Systems 102 Volume at Time
82 Pivot Points 104 Williams %R
84 Point & Figure 106 What Else? CS Lite
86 Previous OHLC 108 What Else? MS Visual Studio
The first is all of the custom charts you have created in your login. The second is a section of
sample charts that can be saved to your login and modified. The third is the chart showcase
which shows some of the new charting analytics we have released. The fourth is the Chart
Resource section with links to cheat sheets, the Bloomberg Technical Strategy Research
document, and upcoming seminars. Lastly, at the bottom of the page is the Chart of the Day
newswire where Bloombergs award winning news division publishes interesting relationships
spotted in the financial markets using charts. Get in the habit of typing GRAPH<go> for all of
your charting needs.
For more information about technical studies on Bloomberg, press G <GO>, press <Help>,
click option 6 for Related Information, click Technical Studies. For more technical analysis
documents, type GEDU<GO>.
3
The image on page 5 represents the Folder view within G. If yours doesnt look like this, click
the red button at the top of G<GO> that says Show Folders. Now you can create folders and
save many charts as you wish to track and represent the market. In this image, we are
currently looking at the charts in the Daily folder. These charts are all a period of daily for
about one year and have various studies on them. Other folders like spreads have saved
charts of the US Government Bond spreads along with other markets like equity indices,
currencies, and commodities. The sky is the limit.
5
Below is a chart of DOE Crude Oil Total Inventory Data for the last five years. We can quickly
and easily see that inventory levels in 2009 were at a five year high. We could look at more
history by changing the range from 12/31/04 to maybe 12/31/00. If we did so, wed see
they were still at all time highs.
Different security types have different options listed in the chart dashboard. The amber fields
below the red toolbar allow you to customize the date range, modify the data being shown on
the price chart, add moving averages, add other data sets like volume, open interest, and total
option volume, and add a moving average to those data sets.
9
The dashboard at the top of the GPO page allows you to modify the period/range of data on
the chart, change the display of the upper and lower panel, add moving averages to both
panels, and also modify the currency the security is quoted in.
The thin grey toolbar on the price chart is home to many other popular features such as an
annotations palette, news, zooming, and more.
Each candlestick drawn consists of two components: the real body and the shadow. The real
body is the thick part of the candlestick that represents the open and the close. The thin lines
above and below the real body are the shadows. These shadows represent the sessions price
extremes. The shadow above the real body is called the upper shadow, which measures the
high of the session. The shadow below the real body is called the lower shadow, which
measures the low of the session. For more on candle pattern analysis, see
DOCS 2050569<go> on your Bloomberg Terminal
A log chart tends to be a more effective representation of price movement over time,
particularly those with significant price appreciation or depreciation. The longer the time frame
and the larger the price move, log scale charts will define the trend in a clearer picture. Many
technical analysts prefer log charts when using trend lines, as the angles will be different than
on a regular chart. Experts suggest looking at both to determine levels of support, resistance,
and trend changes.
15
ANNOTATIONS G, GP
ANNOTATIONS
- Delete All Annotations
- Mouse Pointer - Delete All Text
- Add Text - Ghost Hide All
- Trend Lines - Unghost Unhide All
- Fibonacci
- Calculation Tools
- Shapes - Choose Text Properties
- Choose Annotation Color
- Choose Line Thickness
- Choose Line Style
- Edit Annotation
- Edit Text
- Reveal All Annotations
- Move/Resize Annotation
- Persistent Selection
- Copy Annotation
- Magnet
- Delete Annotation
- Rotate Annotation Colors
- Ghost Hide Annotation
18
Many people have different ideas on how to qualify a trend line as broken. The generally
accepted way of doing so is to see price close on the opposite side of the line. To confirm it,
some wait for a second consecutive close. Others may wait for price to get 1-3% beyond that
line. It is quite common for a trend line to change polarity, meaning if it was previously
support, it will probably act as resistance on a false rally.
19
CALCULATION TOOLS
The calculations button in the annotations palette offers some useful tools to draw on the
chart. Shown below is an example of each annotation. Starting with measuring price
movement, there are two tools you can use, Percent Change and Net Change. In
TDEF1<go> you have the option to turn the Span option on/off and to show or hide Annualized
% Change. Next is the Average Line in white going across the center of the chart. For the
three year weekly chart, the average closing price is $59.34. Price is almost 9% above the
average. In early 2008, price was 9% above the average and retraced to it. Another helpful
tool to draw is linear regression. On the right side of the chart I have drawn the regression tool
from the lows of 2009 to present time showing the best fit line and +/- 1 and 2 standard
deviations from it forming a channel.
Measuring price is always helpful, but how about time? We have added two annotations that
can do this. The Cycle Finder and the Time Span. There is one major difference between the
two. The cycle finder goes indefinitely in each direction where the Time Span is one cycle that
is easily copied and shifted to analyze other areas of the chart. Both become extremely useful
for following the Principles of Cycle analysis such as Harmonicity and Summation discussed
Technical Analysis Explained by Martin Pring.
21
CALCULATION TOOLS
22
A maximum value of 100 is reached when the instrument opens trading at the low and closes
at the high. Conversely, when the period opens at the high and closes on the low, the ADO is
0. A turn up or turn down in the ADO can indicate a change in trend before the trend change
happens.
The signal line is a moving average of the ADO. It smooths the ADO line to determine when
the security, on average, is overbought or oversold and a trend change is more likely to occur.
23
Auto Regression Bands is a way to monitor where price is relative to a linear fit line
and X standard deviations from that line.
This can be important because trends and ranges can frequently become overbought or
oversold. The +2 and -2 standard deviation lines serve as support and resistance in the trend.
The likelihood of price breaking either of these levels is small because roughly 95% of the
occurrences (closing prices) will occur between these levels. If your trend reaches the +2
standard deviation line, one would expect price to sell off rather than break above it. In the
event price breaks the +2 level, something very significant is occurring forcing an influx of
demand without additional supply and therefore a new trend is forming.
You can choose to use this as an indicator or also draw it on your charts by clicking on the
grey Annotations button and selecting Regression. In drawing this study, you would likely
identify a significant turning point on the chart and draw it to the current point. The study
becomes handy when looking at fixed time periods, such as a 5 year weekly chart with a study
setting of 260 weeks.
25
The true range for a single trading day is the greatest of these three choices:
1. Todays high minus todays low
2. The absolute value of todays high minus yesterdays close
3. The absolute value of todays low minus yesterdays close
In short, the true range represents todays trading range, adjusted for the gap between
yesterdays close and todays open. The ATR is an exponential average of these values over
time. The Average True Range is a non-directional indicator which tends to peak at market
turns. That is, in an uptrend, a high ATR would suggest an impending top. In a downtrend, an
impending bottom.
27
The Fear & Greed indicator is the third in a series of proprietary indicators developed
specifically for the BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL service. Fear & Greed uses Average True
Range (ATR) and Exponential Moving Averages to calculate. The resulting indicator is an
oscillator that identifies when price volatility is supporting a bullish or bearish trend.
The green sections indicate the bulls are in control; the red sections indicate the bears are in
control. The letter A stands for Alert, and indicates when the sentiment is reversing. There is
a sensitivity factor used to smooth out the oscillator. Use a higher number (7-10) for longer-
term analysis, or a lower number (2-4) as a shorter-term indication.
For more information on Fear & Greed, type DOCS FEAR GREED <GO>.
29
In an uptrend, a green support line will appear below the price. If the price trades below the
line but closes above, this represents a short-term buying opportunity. A sell signal is
generated when the price breaks below the green support line.
In a downtrend, a red resistance line will appear above the price. If the price trades above this
line but closes below, the price should trade lower in the short-term. A buy signal is generated
when the price breaks above the red resistance line.
Many trading bands use a percentage above and below a moving average to measure
volatility. Bollinger Bands, however, are created by calculating two standard deviations above
and below a 20-day simple moving average. Therefore, the price should remain within the
bands ~95% of the time.
In a range-bound market, the price should find resistance at the upper band, and support at
the lower band. If the price breaks decisively through either band, extreme momentum should
propel the price further in the direction of the breakout. John Bollinger suggests that a
significant price move will be prefaced by a period of lower volatility. Look at the bandwidth
(represents the width of the bands) to identify these consolidation periods.
33
DOJI: A doji candle has an open and close at about the same level. Therefore, the candle
appears as a cross on the chart. This pattern suggests a trend reversal.
HAMMER: A hammer candle has a small real body, a long lower shadow, and no upper shadow.
A hammer only appears in a downtrend, and suggests a bottom. In an uptrend, this would be
called a hanging man.
ENGULFING PATTERN: In an uptrend, a long open candle is followed be a long solid candle, and
the second candles real body engulfs the real body of the first. In a downtrend, a long solid
candle is followed by a long open candle.
From CNDL<GO> press <Help> and select 6 <GO> for a list of illustrated candlestick patterns.
35
Chaikin Oscillator = (3-day moving avg of the ADL) - (10-day moving avg of the ADL)
There are two ways in which the Chaikin Oscillator is used. The most important signal to note is
divergence between price and the oscillator: when prices reach a new high or low in a trend and
the oscillator fails to exceed its previous extreme reading and then reverses direction.
A second way to use the oscillator is to note changes in direction. BUY signals are given when the
price of the security is above its 14-day moving average, the oscillator turns upwards and the value
of the oscillator is negative. SELL signals are given when the price of the security is below its 14-
day moving average, the oscillator turns downwards and the value of the oscillator is positive.
37
A divergence occurs when the price of a security makes new highs/lows while the CCI fails to
surpass its previous highs/lows. This divergence suggests that the momentum is coming out
of the trend, and a reversal is imminent.
For more information on the Commodity Channel Index, type G <GO> and press <Help>,
scroll to page 3 and select 30 <GO> Technical Studies.
39
TD Sequential suggests a short term trend change for 1-4 price bars when a green 9 appears.
It also suggests a long term trend change to be confirmed within 12 bars when a red 13
appears.
There are over 25 DeMarkTM indicators on the Bloomberg system. Type GEG <GO>
5 <GO> for a listing of indicators and example G templates of each. Also, you can type
DEMARK <GO> for some background on the indicators and further materials.
For more information on TD Sequential, see GEDU<GO>. For more information on all DeMark
indicators, consider reading DeMark Indicators by Jason Perl and subscribing to TDRS<GO>
41
A buy signal is generated when +DMI (green) crosses up through DMI (red).
A sell signal is generated when +DMI (green) crosses down through DMI (red).
The white ADX line is a 14-period moving average of the difference between the +DMI and
DMI values, and represents the strength of the trend. An ADX above 20 or 25 would suggest
a trending market, while an ADX level below 20 or 25 would indicate a range-bound market. A
buy/sell signal, coupled with an increasing ADX line, suggests a stronger trend.
43
Erlanger Put / Call Ratio is a measurement of the volume weighted value of all options
contracts for a security. It uses a weighted average of the call and put volume and then
abstracts the Median for that time frame plotting both on the chart.
1. An uptrend is underway when there is a green highlight above the center line.
2. A pullback in an uptrend is underway when there is red highlight above the centerline
3. A downtrend is under way when there is a red highlight below the centerline
4. A rally in the downtrend is underway when there is a green highlight below the
centerline
It might help to think of the trend direction mechanism as a coincident (to slightly lagging)
indicator. The four stages allow for the indicator to confirm an investors suspicion of a top,
bottom, or turn in the market. It is suggested to use this indicator on multiple time frames to
build confidence in the direction of trend for the short, intermediate, and long term.
The Fibonacci levels are based on a sequence of numbers: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89,
etc., where every number is the sum of the two previous numbers. The percentages used in
this analysis all come from the above sequence of numbers.
The two main Fibonacci levels (38.2%, 61.8%) often serve as key support/resistance levels.
The other percentages (23.6%, 50%, 76.4%) serve as secondary levels. Once a security has
had a strong trend, and has started to reverse, apply the Fibonacci retracements to the original
trend to determine support/resistance levels between the two extremes. To draw this study,
from any chart, click on Annotate > R for Retracements and select from the eight available.
To edit your Fibonacci levels, type TDEF1 <GO> and click on Values on the bottom left.
49
Practitioners of the Ichimoku technique can use these charts to identify short-term momentum,
long-term trends, and price objectives. For more information on Ichimoku charts, type DOCS
ICHIMOKU <GO>.
51
Chaos theory itself has been around for many years, and is often used in fields outside of
finance. The Bloomberg representation of this technique is based on the work done by
Christopher May, which involves nonlinear pricing methodology. The portfolio theory of the
1970s assumes that price movement of any traded security is random 100% of the time, that
is, its unpredictable. Hurst shows the assumption of randomness is overly restrictive. A time
series can be persistent, random, or anti-persistent. A persistent time series has the tendency
to continue doing what it has been doing, i.e., going up or going down. A random time series
is totally unpredictable, and an anti-persistent time series has a higher probability of reversing
its current trend rather than continuing. Thanks to computers, applied math has shown that
the assumption of randomness is incorrect. Prices persist or anti-persist more often than they
are random, as the study indicates. If the portfolio theory were correct, the Hurst Exponent
would constantly have a value of 0.5, which identifies a random time series. As the graph
shows, most of the time prices are either persistent or anti-persistent.
53
The example above is a 30 minute bar chart showing the last 20 days of trading. Placed on
top of that in yellow is a moving average of the closing values for the last ten days. Notice how
a daily moving averaged placed on an intraday chart provided resistance on 7/15, 7/17 and
7/31.
If you frequently look at intraday charts, plotting the moving average of the daily closing price
along with a moving average of the last 10 bars of 30 minute trading could provide important
signals and support/resistance levels. Important signals could be generated when price
breaks both levels and when the intraday moving average crosses the daily moving average.
55
You can also treat Keltner Bands as an oscillator- i.e., above the upper band is overbought,
below the lower band is oversold. In a sideways market, the upper and lower bands can often
be used as short-term reversal points.
The middle band represents the Average Price, or an average of the high, low, and closing
prices. The upper band is the 10-day moving average of the Average Price plus the 10-day
moving average of the daily trading range (high-low). The lower band is the 10-day moving
average of the Average Price minus the 10-day moving average of the daily trading range.
57
Each letter represents 30 minutes of the trading day, and illustrates at which price levels
trades were executed during that 30-minute period. At the end of the day, all the letters are
stacked on the left column to create a picture of the trading activity. A normally distributed
trading day will have the shape of a bell curve. The blue column is called the point of control,
and shows where the most time was spent during the session. The value area (horizontal
lines) represents one standard deviation of the days trading range.
The shape of the picture, the distribution of volume, and the change in the value area should
help you to identify points of liquidity in the current session.
For more information on Market Picture, type MKTP and press <Help>. You may also type
DOCS MARKET PICTURE <GO>.
59
MAX/MIN G, GRAPH
The Max/Min indicator is designed to point out the highest high and lowest low in the last X
days. This indicator can be considered a trend-following breakout system. If a security is in a
downtrend and finds a potential bottom, a break above the orange line is confirmation of a
change in trend. In contrast, if the security is in an uptrend and forms a top, a break down
below the blue line is confirmation of a change in trend. In summary:
1. When price closes above the Max line (orange), buy long and cover short positions.
2. When price closes below the Min line (light blue), sell short and liquidate long
positions
Another way to use the indicator is monitoring a range bound market. In the below example
for Gentex GNTX , the security is not at a top or a bottom but has been consolidating in the $16-
16.50 range. A breakout above or below the highest or lowest price over the last 20 days
would indicate the security rallying in that direction.
61
A breadth indicator measures the participation of the entire stock market in order to gauge
the strength or weakness of it. For example, a healthy bull market is accompanied by a large
number of stocks making moderate upward advances in price. A weakening bull market is
characterized by a small number of stocks making large advances in price, giving the false
appearance that everything is well. This type of divergence often signals an end to the bull
market, which can also signal the same for particular stocks. A similar interpretation applies to
market bottoms, where the market index continues to decline while fewer stocks are declining.
For more information on the McClellan Oscillator, type MCCL<GO> and press <Help>
63
MOMENTUM G, GRAPH
The Momentum indicator allows one to simply measure the net change in price between
two points on a chart.
For example, the orange line in the chart above is being calculated by taking todays closing
price and subtracting the closing price 10 days ago from it. Applied on top of that is a 5 day
moving average of the momentum line.
Typically, a buy signal would be generated with the Momentum line crosses above the moving
average and a sell when then Momentum line crosses below the moving average. One should
also look for areas of divergence. Divergence is occurs when price makes a higher high and
the indicator fails to do the same adding bearish sentiment to the chart. It also occurs when
price makes a lower low and the indicator fails to do the same adding bullish sentiment to the
chart.
65
MOMENTUM G, GRAPH
66
For the most part, price and money flow should move in conjunction. However, when a
divergence occurs, remember that price follows money.
For more information on the calculations and interpretations of Money Flow, type GM<GO>
and then press <Help>
67
Looking at the below weekly graph we can see a typical representation of how these averages react in
a trending market. Typically, a VMA generates the earliest signal because of the way it considers
volatility in its calculation. A WMA is next because it considers the current price the most in the average.
The EMA is a close third to the SMA and then the TMA. And remember, just because the VMA tends to
provide the earliest signal, that doesnt mean its the right one!
69
The MACD line (white) represents the difference between the 12 and 26-day exponential
moving averages. The Signal line (red) is a 9-day exponential moving average of the MACD
line. An exponential moving average applies a percentage of todays value to yesterdays
moving average value. For more information, type:
GPMA <Help> and select 9 <GO>.
A buy signal is generated when the MACD line crosses up through the Signal line. This signal
is strongest at the lower end of the MACD range. A sell signal is generated when the MACD
line crosses down through the Signal line. This signal is strongest at the higher end of the
MACD range.
71
The theory behind envelopes is that overzealous buyers and sellers push prices to extremes,
i.e. the upper and lower bands, at which point prices often stabilize by moving to mean
reversion levels. When the price reaches the upper band, it is assumed that resistance will be
met and the price will trade lower. When the price reaches the lower band, the theory is that
buyers will enter the market and push the price higher. When the price action breaks through
the upper or lower band, ideally on heavy volume, a breakout has occurred and a continuation
of the current trend is expected.
73
1. White line is the spread between two specified simple moving averages
2. The red line is a simple moving average of the white line
3. The histogram is a visual representation of the spread between the white and
red line.
This indicator uses simple moving averages, meaning it simply adds each value and
divides by the number of values it added up. MACD, on the other hand, uses an
exponential moving average calculation that weights the current closing price more in the
calculation and never omits any closing prices historically from the start of its calculation.
Depending on your style of investing, some prefer simple averages and others prefer
exponential.
75
In theory, On-balance volume changes should precede price changes. The On-balance
volume line is calculated in the following manner: If the market closes higher than the previous
days close, that days volume is added to the cumulative total. On a down day, that days
volume is subtracted from the total.
The indicator is most useful when divergences are apparent. It is bearish, or a signal of an
impending top, when price continues to set higher highs and the OBV level is declining. It is
bullish, or a signal of an impending bottom, when price continues to set lower lows and the
OBV level is turning up. The overall direction of line is the important factor, not the value.
77
In the chart below, each green line is drawn from the highest high after the first five bars of
trading and the red line is drawn from the lowest low based on the first five bars of trading.
This bar chart is a 10 minute chart so it would also be correct in saying a line is drawn from the
highest high and lowest low based on the first 50 minutes of trading. If price has enough
strength to break through the highest high after the first 50 minutes of trading (taking into
consideration the adjustment of supply and demand since the market had been trading for
almost an hour), price is in a strong uptrend and should close equal to or higher than that level
on that day and also possibly find support at it.
Take a look at August 11th. Based on the first 50 minutes of trading a high line was set at
35.15. Price broke above this level and traded above 35.50 through the lunch time hour.
Then the trend changed breaking below support at 35.50 and closed right near the high line.
79
The SAR on the first day of a trade is equal to the extreme price (EP) reached in the previous
trade. The extreme price can be defined in a long trade as the lowest price reached while in
the previous short trade. The SAR points follow the price using an acceleration factor (AF)
that increases based on the velocity of the price movement.
When the price crosses the line of SAR points, the indicator suggests closing the current
position and opening a new position in the opposite direction.
81
If a market opens above the P.P. and starts to sell off, many floor traders will cover shorts and
also go long into this price level. If the market rallies from the P.P., locals will look to
liquidate into R1 as well as short there. If the market proceeds to penetrate above R1, locals
will lean on this level by covering their shorts and going long, thus trying to push the market to
the next inflection point higher, R2. The same holds true that they will lean on this R2 level
just as they did the R1. The same method of leaning on these inflection points also occurs if
the market is below the P.P. Locals will lean on S1 and look to buy there hoping to push the
market back to the P.P. If S1 gives way, locals will sell out their longs and go short, looking for
a move down to S2.
For more information on Pivot Points, type G <GO> and press <Help>, scroll to page 3 and
select 30 <GO>.
83
The box size refers to the price scale used on the chart. For example, if the box size is 1, then
each X or O represents 1 price point.
The reversal determines when you will move to a new column, and is represented as a
multiple of the box size. That is, if the box size is .5 and the reversal is set at 3, then the price
would have to move against the trend by 1.5 price points to move to a new column. Typically,
a ratio of 1:3 is used for the box size and reversal. In the columns the numbers 1-9 and letters
A,B,C represent January through September and October through December respectively.
In the short-term, a change in column can often signal a reversal in trend. In the long-term,
use Point & Figure charts to identify key support and resistance levels, breakout patterns, and
price congestion.
For more information on point & figure charts, type PFP <GO> and press <Help>
85
For the most part, price and ROC should move together. When the price and ROC diverge,
look for the ROC to be a clearer indication of the underlying momentum of the trend.
For more information on the calculations and interpretations of Rate of Change, type G <GO>
and press <Help>, scroll to page 3 and select 30 <GO>.
89
To apply regression lines on Bloomberg, click on the gray Annotations button, and select one
of the regression options. Now left click at the beginning of the time frame you want, and drag
the mouse over to the right. The lines will update dynamically based on the price data.
Regression + 2 Standard Deviations is in this featured chart.
You can drag the regression lines past the current data to project the lines forward.
The middle line is the least squares regression line, or a best fit line. This means the line is
the best representation of the overall move for that time period. The other lines are one and
two standard deviations above and below the regression line.
When the price reaches the outside boundaries of the regression channel, look for the price to
revert to the mean, or return to the middle regression line.
Bloomberg also has an Auto Regression Bands feature, which will automatically show
regression lines with a preset number of days. Create a G graph to use this indicator.
91
In the above example, Microsoft MSFT bottomed out in June 2006 at $22/share. A rally ensued
into the summer months primarily fueled by the anticipated release of Windows Vista TM.
MSFT was outperforming the S&P 500 for over six months as the Relative Value portion of the
graph demonstrates. Trend line analysis allows us to identify two support lines that were
broken on the price graph and a well defined support line on the RV graph. The break of both
trend lines should have been enough to convince us the uptrend in MSFT was coming to an
end.
93
An overbought condition (RSI > 70) suggests the security has moved too high too quickly. A
break back below 70 should indicate a correction.
An oversold condition (RSI < 30) suggests the security has moved too low too quickly. A
break back above 30 should indicate a correction.
For longer-term signals, look for divergences between price and RSI. A bullish divergence
sees price sloping down and RSI sloping up. A bearish divergence is present when price is
sloping up, and RSI is sloping down.
95
The True Value of a Bar (TVB) gives us an indication of how healthy the market is. It is possible to
have a negative close and a positive TVB, and vice versa. This indicates that the market is building
strength on the opposing side of the trend. The Rex Oscillator is a moving average of the TVB,
indicating the inertia of the market. When the Rex Oscillator turns positive in a bearish trend, a
reversal is indicated. Likewise, Rex turning negative in a bull market indicates a reversal to the
downside.
STOCHASTICS G, GRAPH
%K = [(current close - low for period) / (high for period - lowest low price for period) * 100
A buy signal is generated when both lines become oversold and the %K line crosses up
through the %D line. A sell signal is generated when both lines become overbought and the
%K line crosses down through the %D line.
Slowed stochastics uses moving averages of the %D line, represented by the %DS and %DSS
lines. As these lines are smoothed out even further, they tend to reduce noise and give purer
signals of momentum change.
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STOCHASTICS G, GRAPH
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Looking at the above graph of BJs Wholesale Club Inc. we can see price was in a downtrend from
the middle of July to the middle of August. Lines labeled 1 highlight decreasing stock price and
increasing volume confirming the downtrend. Price began to consolidate and volume began to
decline during late August. Lines labeled 2 point out the side ways price movement and the
declining volume. This indicated the downtrend was consolidating. The morning star pattern
surfaced and volume began to pick up signaling the beginning of an uptrend. Price and volume
rallied as pointed out by lines labeled 3 indicating a strong uptrend. Price then began to
consolidate and volume began decreasing at lines labeled 4. This is another period of
consolidation. This formation happens to look like a short term continuation pattern called a Flag.
Looking forward we would want to see price break above the green resistance level with an
increase in volume to confirm a continuation of the uptrend.
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1. Actual volume (white histogram) compared to the average volume (blue dash) over the
last X years for that date. Average volume will project forward to show how it has acted
in the past.
2. Volume differential is a comparison of actual volume to the average volume plotted as a
histogram. Green indicates greater volume then average, red indicates less volume
then average.
3. Daily Accumulated Volume displays the total volume year to date plotted as a line and
compares it to the total average volume year to date.
4. Accumulated Volume Difference displays the spread between the Daily Accumulated
Volume and the Daily Accumulated Average Volume.
Take a look at the graph below and see how Verizon Communications challenged resistance
at $38.50 for a few days as volume fell well below the average leading to a price decline.
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WILLIAMS %R G, GRAPH
Williams %R measures price momentum to identify overextended moves.
Williams %R, developed by Larry Williams, is similar to other momentum-based oscillators.
Price action is evaluated over a rolling n days in order to detect extreme markets and potential
reversal points.
The %R oscillator value ranges from -100 to 0. A value above -20 suggests a possible
overbought condition, and value below -80 suggests a possible oversold condition. This does
not mean price will immediately reverse once either of these levels is reached. Prices can
remain overbought or oversold for long periods of time, commonly seen in trending phases.
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WILLIAMS %R G, GRAPH
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If you are interested in learning more about it, please email Paul Ciana at
pciana@bloomberg.net. Below is a sample of the interface and a formula calculating the
Coppock Study.
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If you are interested in learning more about it, please email Paul Ciana at
pciana@bloomberg.net. Below is a sample of the Microsoft Visual Studio interface and some
sample code.
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Also included in the weekly document is a section for product enhancements, chart school,
seminar updates, and book releases.
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At the bottom of the story, youll find a link allowing you to save the chart to your G so you can
look back at the relationship in the future. Youll also find the contact information of the
reporter and editors so you can contact them with any comments or questions.
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Run NI TA<Go> and try using the grey buttons at the top to filter the news to things you care
about. Once you find reasonable results, click the red Save button. This search will then
save into your NLRT<go> page. Use NLRT to manage and further customize this search, and
also choose how to receive the stories that may be important to you.
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The ability to automatically identify these patterns on a chart, made possible by a company
called Recognia, will allow you to spot trends and learn more about the patterns. To find these
patterns, you can run ATEC<go> and youll see all of the patterns occurring on about 50
exchanges worldwide. To limit these results, try running LTEC<go> and selecting a list of
securities. Click on a resulting news story and youll see that it explains the pattern and also
provides a link to see the pattern on chart. If you want to see price pattern history on only one
security, load that security into a Bloomberg window and type CTEC<go>.
If you are currently using a G or LP chart, you can click on the grey Events button and toggle
Chart Patterns to the on position to view them historically on a chart. Clicking on the icon on
the chart will then display the pattern. Clicking on the icon again will turn it off.
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EVENTS ON A CHART G, GP E
When painting a picture of past performance, one may know when a company released
earnings, when a country announced its GDP, when the Department of Energy released oil
inventories, or when a technical indicator signal occurred. Bloombergs custom G chart allows
one to flag or paint the day historically an event occurred. We currently support eleven
categories of events and they are:
EVENTS ON A CHART G, GP E
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In regards to Technical Analysis, you can set alerts on 15 indicators with more coming in 2010.
The image below shows ALRT<GO> 1<GO> 6<GO> selecting Step 2 to show the studies. If
you follow the four steps, its quick and easy to set up an alert on a list of securities for a
particular technical signal.
Also useful is setting an alert from a G chart for a security your analyzing. To do this, right
click on a study, hover on the study in the menu list, then choose Alert and enter the
appropriate information in the window that opens and click Update.
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Other criteria can certainly be used. Try typing EQS<GO> and clicking into the amber field in
the center and typing a world like Volatility or CDS or P/E. All of these types of data sets
are readily available.
To take the search to another level, you can go into ALRT<GO> 1<GO> 6<GO> and monitor
the results of search for addition information. Something you might consider on a search like
this is an alert for when RSI 14 crosses below 45. If the stock is truly in an uptrend, RSI 14
should stay above 40. If it looks like its basing, it may be a potential entry point.
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BACKTESTING BTST
Backtesting on Bloomberg is an area that you will see growing with respect to technical
analysis in 2010 and beyond. Currently, BTST supports the testing of eight technical studies
on a daily basis for up to two years, a weekly basis for up to ten years, and a monthly basis for
up to forty years. You can modify your trading approach, that being long, short, or both. The
study parameters pull from TDEF<go> and can be modified in either location. You can also
set an investment amount, commission type and rate, and adjust your entry/exit point by
entering a figure into the amber slippage field.
Once you set your parameters, the figures below show you which study performed the best
over that time period. You can then click into a study, such as Williams %R which performed
the best here, and see price a chart with the study and P/L line.
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BACKTESTING BTST