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To: ViperChick Secret Agent 006.9 who wrote (9615)6/4/1998 6:54:00 PM
From: Chris  Respond to of 42787
 
actually

the 50 day ema has a steeper angle (downward) than 50 dma.

but yes, 50 day ema is ready to cross 200 day ema.

do note that 9 day ema already below 21,50,200 day ema.
BEEEARRISHH <g>

CSS II:
Analysis of TEXAS INSTRUMENT
(TXN)

Reviewed on 6/4/98

****************************
High: 51.125
Low: 48.375
Close: 50.875
Change: 2.875 (5.9896%)

Volume Today: 2,794,800 shares.

On 6/4/98, TEXAS INSTRUMENT closed up 2.8750 at 50.8750 on volume 14.25% below average.
****************************

Summary:

Moving Averages

TEXAS INSTRUMENT closed at: 50.875

The close is currently Above its 5 period exponential moving average (50.3652).

The close is currently Below its 9 period exponential moving average (51.7686).

The close is currently Below its 21 period exponential moving average (55.0234).

The close is currently Below its 50 period exponential moving average(56.6089).

The close is currently Below its 200 period exponential moving average (53.9324).

****************************
Candlesticks (Automatically done by Metastock. Accuracy Unverified)

A white body occurred (because prices closed higher than they opened).
During the past 10 bars, there have been 1 white candles and 9 black candles for a net of 8 black candles. During the past 50 bars, there have been 23 white candles and 27 black candles for a net of 4 black candles.



To: ViperChick Secret Agent 006.9 who wrote (9615)6/4/1998 10:11:00 PM
From: ViperChick Secret Agent 006.9  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 42787
 
high tech TA ;-)

To: +Eric Stendal (164 )
From: +dave horne
Thursday, Jun 4 1998 10:07PM ET
Reply # of 165

[Williams A/D]
is defined as:
((C-O)/(H-L))*volume=daily A/D figure.

(NOTE: Williams uses different A/D equations for different indicators; others besides
Larry Williams utilize this definition of A/D (e.g. Tom DeMark, John Murphy)

The most notable difference in this version of A/D is the use of opening prices. In
candlestick terms, this indicator will contribute positive volume for white candle days
(C>O), and negative volume for black candle days(C<O). The volume scale factor is
the fraction of the daily range taken up by the candle body.

If we open on the low and close on the high, AND the close was higher than yesterday's
close, Williams' A/D contributes the same positive volume (ALL) as Granville's OBV.

Same concept holds for opening on the high and closing on the low, and below
yesterday's close.

Like the other A/D measures, this is biased (i.e. larger than reality). However, the bias is
lower that either Chaikin's or OBV. The use of all available data (H,L,C,vol AND
OPEN) reduces the bias as follows:

Whereas Chaikin's version assigns all the day's volume as an addition to the running sum
on ANY day that closes on the high, the William A/D only assigns all the day's volume
as an addition to the sum if the open is on the low and the close is on the high.

Opens or closes in any other position contribute some fraction of the total available
volume.

Although the amount of volume assigned is still too high, it makes more intuitive sense to
limit the high bias cases to days when we open on the low and close on the high (as
opposed to ANY day that closes on the high, irrespective of where it opened).

Opening on the low and closing on the high is the most positive scenario for prices, so if
we can control our high bias case, this is where we would choose to apply it.

One of the assumptions the Williams A/D makes is that the day's volume is uniformly
distributed across the days range, and that the portion of the days volume that happened
outside the candle body (i.e. in the shadows) consists of offsetting trades (buys and sells
matched), and therefore doesn't contribute to the daily A/D figure. If you think about the
mechanics of the equation, this is what it is implying.

This makes intuitive sense as a way to make a first-order approximation to the volume
distribution across the day's range, and how to divvy it up as either accumulation,
distribution, or offset trades.

We can make some refinements to this, but beyond a certain point the confidence in our
assumptions goes way down (more on this later).

Summary:
Using the relation (C-O)/(H-L) as the baseline for an A/D indicator makes more
intuitive sense than the other two A/D measures described in the prior posts. It is the
only one that uses all available data (O-H-L-C-volume). The other two completely
ignore perfectly valid data from an already-small sample of four prices per trading day.
Neither of the other two measures accounts for the price movements from the open
(and associated volume). Granville's uses only the closing price.

As a user of these indicators, you have to decide whether you believe:
1. Only the closing price has significance, and the rest is noise;
2. Only the high, low and close have significance, and the open is noise;
3. The best results are achieved by using all available data;

I choose the latter, knowing full well that using only four price points to represent an
entire day's trading (possibly thousands of actual trades) is only a crude approximation.
But it is a better approximation than the case of Chaikin's A/D or OBV. It also uses the
four prices of greatest significance during a trading day.

Any experienced user of candlesticks will confirm the value of using all four available
prices for each day, compared to just 3 or just 1. This is the most convincing argument
for me, because candlesticks were the single most significant tool I've added to my
trading toolbox. The main thing candlesticks do is visually enhance the significance of the
range from open to close, and the direction.

I think Ray and Rainier would both confirm the value of using the four-price candlestick
view compared to any other price tracking method.

Some refinements to the Williams A/D can add even more of the information we can get
from candlesticks. This may just give an A/D indicator with useful daily signals.

dh