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Thanks for these titles, I'll take a look.
Hayden's book is out of print. I haven't been able to find a copy for some
time.
Lionel
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From: equismetastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:equismetastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Eduardo Gontan Pulgarin
Sent: Monday, June 05, 2006 10:33 PM
To: equismetastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [EquisMetaStock Group] Similar Indicators
Hi drauosi ,
That I know of, there is no such thing as a leading indicator as that would
be a license to print money, that is, whoever had such an indicator would
know tomorrow's price...
The MACD, RSI, et al., are all based on price - some even have price and
volume in their construction, but basically all rely on price, and are
therefore lagging indicators.
In the case of the RSI, MACD Histograms, and others, the divergeance they
make against the underlying's price may, occasionally (but not always) point
to a probable profitable trade - it is all probabilities, you see; there is
no real certainty in trading markets, except that , depending on you broker,
you may get fleeced or not!
For what it is worth, here is a book on the RSI; in fact, the best that
you'll find on that particular indicator:
RSI: The Complete Guide,
by John Hayden,
Traders Press, Inc.
ISBN 0-934380-88-0
John Hayden was Andrew Cardwell's associate; Andrew Cardwell is the most
authoritative figure on the RSI - I think that he charges US$2,000 for a two
days seminar!
While we are on the subject of books, read this one - it will take you
further in your trading career than any indicator in the world will:
The Trading Game: Playing by the Numbers to Make Millions
by Ryan Jones
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
ISBN 0-471-31698-9
Don't be fooled by the name - it is the best book on money management that I
have come across!
Eduardo.
drauosi <drauosi@xxxxxx <mailto:drauosi%40yahoo.com> com> wrote:
Hi All,
I've read many books on techinical analysis that strongly suggest not
to use "similar" indicators as confirmation of a buy or sell signal.
For example, do not use moving average crossover with a MACD because
they both rely on moving averages of the closing prices. Does anybody
have a list of indicators that should not be used in this way? I've
searched the net but no luck so far.
I've also found that some "experts" call the RSI a leading indicator
and others call it a price following indicator. Can anybody supply me
with a list of the common indicators and whether they are leading or
price following?
Many thanks,
Jeff.
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