Article Archive For Keyword:
Old
AUTHOR: Koos van der MerweDATE: MAY 2012
AUTHOR: David PennDATE: AUG 2005
Facelift for an Old Favorite by Gregory L. Morris
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS...Facelift for an Old Favorite
by Gregory L. Morris
""There are many ways in which the Relative Strength Index can
be adjusted and redefined.""
Technical analysts who have not heard of J. Welles Wilder, Jr., and more specifically, his Relative
Strength I
AUTHOR: Gregory L. MorrisDATE: OCT 1985
New Tricks With Old Indicators
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS...Traders are always looking for ways to refine their tools. Here, we'll reshape and redesign two familiar, classic indicators. The result is something new that could improve your ability to identify oversold buying opportunities.
AUTHOR: Jay KaeppelDATE: JAN 2014
AUTHOR: Koos van der MerweDATE: FEB 2015
AUTHOR: Billy WilliamsDATE: NOV 2011
Old Trendlines to Predict Future Movements by Cory Mitchell, CMT
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS...Read The Future By Looking Back, Old Trendlines to Predict Future Movements by Cory Mitchell, CMT
Can you extend old trendlines into time and use them to anticipate future price movements?
Trendlines are well known to most traders, but most traders don
AUTHOR: Cory Mitchell, CMTDATE: DEC 2009
AUTHOR: Andrew HetheringtonDATE: SEP 2003
AUTHOR: Wally ObermeyerDATE: MAR 2003
SIDEBAR: Old RVI, new RVI and inertia
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS...OLD RVI, NEW RVI AND INERTIA
The relative volatility index (RVI) is a modified form of the relative strength index (RSI). The original RSI
calculation separates one-day net changes into positive closes and negative closes, then smoothes the data and
nor
AUTHOR: Technical Analysis, Inc.DATE: SEP 1995
The Secret Of (Old and New) Pros
ARTICLE SYNOPSIS...Trading secret of the pros: Have a plan before you trade -- Then work it!"It is literally true millions come easier to a trader after he knows how to trade, than hundreds did in the days of his ignorance" - Jesse Livermore, 1923
AUTHOR: George KleinmanDATE: JUL 2000
AUTHOR: James AlphierDATE: OCT 1988
AUTHOR: David PennDATE: SEP 2005