vixvix 4 posts msg #114947 - Ignore vixvix |
8/18/2013 1:37:07 PM
For the screen listed below, can someone explain more of what the cutoff value -0.50 represents?
I am assuming that the value if plotted on a Y axis would range from +1.00 to -1.00 for the data regression?
show stocks where the 25 day slope of the RSI(15) is below -0.50
|
four 5,087 posts msg #114948 - Ignore four modified |
8/18/2013 1:56:29 PM
perhaps
definition: http://www.basic-mathematics.com/what-is-slope.html
calculation: http://www.basic-mathematics.com/how-to-find-the-slope.html
|
vixvix 4 posts msg #114949 - Ignore vixvix |
8/18/2013 2:59:27 PM
Thank you.
But for StockFetcher screening of indicators, will the respective values be between +1.0 and -1.0 ?
|
four 5,087 posts msg #114950 - Ignore four modified |
8/18/2013 3:25:39 PM
Values are not restricted between 1 and -1 on Stockfetcher:
http://www.stockfetcher.com/forums/Indicators/Slope-Of/34498
- - - - - Quote - - - - - (bold is my emphasis)
Values above 0 indicate an uptrending measure. Positive values above 1.0 indicate the measure has effectively doubled from start to the end.
Values below 0 indicate a measure which is trending down.
Values near 0 mean that the measure is moving horizontally. This does not mean the values didn't move up or down during the specified time interval, just that the start point is near the end point.
|
pirate67 99 posts msg #114951 - Ignore pirate67 modified |
8/18/2013 4:57:52 PM
Four, your responses are correct as far as what slope measures should be, but take a look at the lower slope charts in these filters. You can clearly see that there are no below 0 values when the stock is going down. Also, since slope is defined as the change in the "Y" values (from one point to the another) divided by the change in the same two points "X" values, the graph numbers have to be something else. In all cases the change of "X" has to be 1 (one day). So, basically the slopes should be the actual change of the two points' "Y" values. This would make it hard to have a criteria or compare different priced stocks. Looking at the values on the lower chart, I am going to guess that absolute % change is in the calculation. Maybe SF can clarify this.
|
four 5,087 posts msg #114954 - Ignore four modified |
8/18/2013 10:29:12 PM
but take a look at the lower slope charts in these filters. You can clearly see that there are no below 0 values when the stock is going down.
-- -------
pirate67,
---->> I offer this observation (AAT : 25 days ago and 8/16/2013). A negative slope of rsi(15). And a lower rsi(15) today than 25 days ago.
25-day Slope of RSI(15) = -1.25
62.60 = rsi(15) 25 days ago
33.06 = todays rsi(15)
33.60 = close 25 days ago
31.25 = today's close
|
pirate67 99 posts msg #114956 - Ignore pirate67 |
8/19/2013 12:56:59 AM
Four, you are totally correct. It shows up properly on the result's column. The lower graph scale I was referring to was the RSI values not any quantification of the slope line. The slope line is merely drawn.Just adding two lines to your filter gets us what we want:
|