Quantity price theory
Indicator Introduction
MAVOL trading volume average
MACD exponential smoothing moving average
KDJ
ARBR emotion index
CR energy index
DMA parallel line difference
EMV simple fluctuation indicator introduction
RSI relative strength indicator introduction
MA moving average
BOLL bollinger line
EMA index smooth moving average
SAR stop-loss point steering index
WMSR William index
BIAS deviation rate
CCI commodity channel index
PSY psychological line
VR volume ratio
OSC oscillator
TDS 9 (Tom Demark Sequential 9)
The OSC Oscillator is an analytical indicator derived from the moving average, which reflects the difference between the current price and the average price over some time.
The oscillator uses the concept of acceleration in the changes in stock prices. According to the law of supply and demand, the stock price increase is shrinking daily. The upward momentum slows down at this point, and the market data may reverse and vice versa when the price falls.
Therefore, the MTM indicates the market index trend, with what force and speed in which direction.
OSC = 100 * (Closing Price - Average of the Last N-day Closing Prices);
OSCEMA = Smoothed Moving Average of the Last M-day OSC;
1) The market is upward when the 10-day OSC is above 100. When the OSC rises above 120, it is an overbought condition.
2) When the 10-day OSC is below 100, the market trends downward. When the OSC falls below 80, it is an oversold condition.
3) A divergence between the OSC and the stock index indicates an impending reversal.If the market index is trending in line with the OSC, it means that the stock index is either going up or down.
1) The oscillator can be used to judge whether the stock market indicates an overbought or oversold condition.
2) The oscillator is a leading indicator, which can signal a price trend in advance but can not predict the magnitude of the trend.
3) Investors should use the oscillator to judge the overbought or oversold condition of the stock market and then decide when to buy or sell with the positive or negative value of the momentum indicator. The two methods can be used together to improve the mark-to-market method.