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Wednesday, 5 March 2014

NIFTY INTRADAY FREE TRADING CALLS :



NIFTY INTRADAY FREE TRADING CALLS :

ONCE AGAIN TARGET Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittttt

Prfotit- 2800.00

Enjoiyyyyyy profit of 2800 in just  4 lot nifty ......


Today hiiiiiiiiitttttttted my all targets  till 6420 and more 6437...

Today’s Trading potentialies for 6th March


Nifty Future above 6361...may reach 6375/6390/6405/6420
Nifty Future below 6325...may reach6310/6295/6280/6265

BASIC TECHNICAL KNOWLEDGE:



BASIC TECHNICAL KNOWLEDGE:

FIRST TRY TO READ CHART AND THEN KNOW MORE...

OHLC Bar Chart

OHLC Bar Chart

Definition:

This acronym stands for Open, High, Low and Close chart and is the same thing as a Western Bar chart. Each bar, when combined with others of the same duration, creates a chart of past price action that technical analysts use to try to determine the future movement of price.





Bar Chart

Bar Chart

Definition:

Bar Charts are often referred to as Western bar charts. Data is plotted on the chart for the open, high, low and close of each period represented by the time frame. The top of the bar is the high, the bottom the low, left side hash mark is the open and the right side hash mark is the close.

Practical Use:

Technical analysts use Western Bar Charts to better determine the price action for each bar and to clean up the "noise" of candlestick charts while still getting the requisite data above and beyond what a line graph can provide.





Candlestick Charts

Candlestick Charts

Definition:

This style of bar chart is used as a color coded visual representation of prices where trades occurred during a specific time frame. Candlestick bars have the appearance of candlesticks and capture the same data as the traditional Open, High, Low and Close (OHLC) Western bars, but candlestick bars are color coded for easier visual interpretation.

Background:

Candlestick charts have been used by the Japanese for technical analysis for over 100 years, long before the development of the bar chart by the West. A man named Homma Munehisa, who was a successful trader in the rice market, discovered that there was a link between prices, supply and demand. In addition, he understood that due to emotions, there was often a difference between "real" value and the price. Homma used candlestick chart analysis, in the 1700s, to help measure the emotions captured in price history and as a fairly reliable tool to predict future demand.
Each bar can represent any specified period of time, with the typical bar durations being 1, 3, 5, 15, 30 and 60 minute for shorter term, and daily, weekly and monthly for longer term analysis.
Candlestick analysis has been modified throughout the years and Steve Nison, CMT, introduced Candlestick charting to the West in the late 1980s.
Candlesticks, candlestick patterns (the combination of two or more individual bars) and chart patterns made up of many candlesticks can be helpful to technical analysts that study price action in order to forecast price into the future.