SYSTEM DESIGN


Making Adjustments Is Critical

Post-Bubble Problems

by David Vomund


For the markets, these are extraordinary times. In the last five years we've experienced the largest equity bubble in US history, and also experienced a bear market comparable to the Great Depression. Technical analysis remains valid in the aftermath of the bubble, as market movement is still based on the laws of supply and demand.

The bubble and the ensuing bear market does pose problems to many forms of analysis, however. In this article I will expose three post-bubble problems in technical analysis. After learning about them, I hope you'll be able to spot these issues in your own analysis and make appropriate adjustments.

PROBLEM 1

Wild price swings hide the chart patterns
Most people use arithmetic charts so that the price scale (y-axis) increases in equal increments. For a given period, the graph encompasses the highest and lowest stock price. The vertical (price) scale is divided into equal increments. This style of graph works for short-term charting, but problems appear when stocks are charted using a period of more than a year.

  ...Continued in the October 2003 issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES


Excerpted from an article originally published in the October 2003 issue of Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES magazine. All rights reserved. © Copyright 2003, Technical Analysis, Inc.



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