## technical analysis
### tl; dr
* uses trading data to analyse and predict price patterns
* gives us data points to compare and contrast
* uses chart patterns, price data, trading volume and indicators
* allows us to follow a systematic strategy that can be improved
* cannot predict the future
---
### candlestick charts
* data rich trading analysis
* time and price details
* traders use candlestick chat patterns to antecipate the future
* show market high and low for a given time period
* each candle is a period in time
* tells: open/close (body) high/low (wick) for a period of time
##### hammer pattern
* bullish pattern
* sellers drove price lower during the day
* buyers came in and the price finished higher
* will continue tomorrow?
* where are open, close, high, low?
##### shooting star pattern
* bearish pattern
* buyers drove price high
* sellers won and price fell lower
* will this continue tomorrow?
##### bullish engulfing pattern
* bullish pattern
* bullish candlestick "engulfed" the bearish candlestick
* represents a strong reversal in the price action
* will continue tomorrow?
##### bearish engulfing pattern
* bearish pattern
* bearish candlestick engulfed the bullish candlestick
* represents a string reversal in the price action
* will continue tomorrow?
----
### chart patterns
* used in conjuction with candlestick charts
* longer-term analysis of market movements
* bullish and bearish patterns
* used with day trading and swing trading
* dont tell about longer term trends
##### double top
* bearish pattern
* buyers tried wtice to push price higher
* buyers unable to push price higher
* price has no moment at this level
* buyers run ot of steam
* sellers are in the market
##### double bottom
* bullish pattern
* sellers came in twice
* price found support of buyers twice
* buyers happy to pay up
* sellers may run out and buyers need to pay more
* buyers are in the market
##### asceding triangle
* charts never trade in a straight line
* charts trend
* highs and lows are important
* consolidation is imporant
* higher highs or higher lows is bullish
* narrowing of a range can preceed a breakout
---
### trends
* we can't trade from patterns all the time, they are quite rare
* trends patterns will guide us more often
* patterns can be housed within trends
* if we can find the trend, we can ride the trend for profit
##### asceding wedge - higher lows
##### desceding wedge - lower highs
##### consolidation
* give us a strong area of trade where traders have been before
* area in the chart moving sideways
* we can use consolidation as a guide for our entry/exit points
* sometimes preceed breakup
* where buyers/sellers are at equilibrium and can't last forever
* use these levels for our stop loss levels
##### support and resistance
* support and resistance are simply significant price levels
* resistance can become support if a price breaks through that level in an uptrend
* vice versa for a downtrend
##### moving averages
* SMA: arithmetic mean of prices over a given time period
* EMA: weighted and give more importance to recent prices
##### relative strength index (RSI)
* plots the relative strength of the price compared to previous prices
* momentum indicator
* above 70: price is relatively expensive (overbought)
* below 30: price is relatively cheap (oversold)
* can't predict how the price will change in the future
##### average true range
* measure of daily price volatility
* tell us the true amount the price could move in a given day
* largest probably move for one day based on previous data
* can be used to set our stop loss and give the trade some breathing room
---
### how to trade with trends
1. Identify the market trends
2. Ask where are the main areas of trade
- where is support and resistance?
- any chart pattern?
3. Make your entry based on the daily trade action
- is the candlestick telling us that the trade will go in the direction of our trade?
- is the trade bullish or bearish based of candlestick patterns?
---
### resources
* [tradingview](https://www.tradingview.com/)
* [tokenmetrics](https://tokenmetrics.com/)