novacane32000 331 posts msg #107529 - Ignore novacane32000 |
8/10/2012 3:07:23 PM
Does anyone know how to determine the angle of a (ma)?
I am thinking this can be used as a gauge to quickly determine Up-Flat -Down markets using longer (ma) such as the 50.
|
Cheese 1,374 posts msg #107530 - Ignore Cheese |
8/10/2012 3:20:32 PM
There are some clever ideas here:
http://forums.stockfetcher.com/sfforums/?q=view&tid=55214&start=0&isiframe=
|
four 5,087 posts msg #107531 - Ignore four |
8/10/2012 3:25:39 PM
using SLOPE...
|
novacane32000 331 posts msg #107537 - Ignore novacane32000 |
8/11/2012 9:52:26 AM
Four-Cheese Thanks. Very helpful.
|
Kevin_in_GA 4,599 posts msg #107539 - Ignore Kevin_in_GA modified |
8/11/2012 4:35:44 PM
The angle of a moving average is sort of irrelevant in that unless it is normalized by percent gain you cannot compare one to another since the abscissa (x-axis) is always the same and the ordinate (y-axis) values are different. Think about comparing AAPL at $620 to MSFT at $30. The angle of the 5 - day slope cannot be compared unless it is in percent move; therefore I would suggest using ROC instead.
One further comment - ROC is calculated just by the begin and end values, and does not take into account the volatility or "bumpiness" of the ride. The reason I say this is that you are talking about the slope of the MA, but that's not what you are buying when you enter the trade. SF has a little used indicator called "rsquared" (the syntax is rsquared(close,days)) that might be of interest to folks here. It basically looks for stocks that are trending in a straight line.
|