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• The primary movement is the “main movement” which is a major trend and may last from less
than a year to several years. It can be bullish or bearish.
• Then we have the medium swing which is a secondary or intermediate reaction and may last
from ten days to three months. It generally retraces from 33% to 66% of the primary price
change since the previous medium swing or start of the main movement.
• Finally, we have the short swing or minor movement varies according to market speculation
from hours to a month or more.
These three movements can happen simultaneously, for example, a daily minor movement in a bearish
secondary reaction in a bullish primary movement.
Accumulation phase: This is the period when knowledgable investors start buying or selling the asset
against the general perception of the market. During this phase of the market, the price of the asset
doesn’t change much because these knowledgable investors are in the minority.
Absorption (or public participation) phase: Eventually the market catches on to these “intelligent
investors” and they follow their trend. More and more people follow these trends until rampant
speculation begins.
Distribution phase: After huge speculation, because of the limited supply of the asset, the price begins
to retrace as the knowledgable investors begin to distribute their holdings to the market. As a result of it
the prices start falling along with the volume.
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#3 The stock market discounts all news
The stock market incorporates new information as soon as it becomes available. Once this news is
released, the price of the asset changes to reflect this new information. The price reflects the sum of all
the hopes, fears, and expectations of all the market participants. Factors such as interest rate
movements, earning expectations, revenue projections, major elections, product initiatives, etc. are all
integrated into the market price.
#6 The trends will exist until definitive signals prove that they have ended
This tenet is a lot like Newton’s first law of motion i.e. an object in motion tends to remain in motion
unless acted upon by an external force. Similarly, the Dow believes that the market remains in trend
despite “market noise.” Determining a reversal in trend is not easy.
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What is Technical Analysis?
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In other words, it is a product of the coin’s circulating supply and the price of each coin. Let’s take an
example:
If “A Coin” has 300,000 coins in circulation and each coin is worth $2, the A Coin’s market cap will be
300,000*2 = $600,000.
You can check the market cap of the top 100 cryptocurrencies on coinmarketcap.com.
Market cap is a great indicator to know about the stability of a coin. In fact, go to coinmarketcap right
now and check Bitcoin’s market cap. This is how its monthly marketcap looks like:
As you can see, Bitcoin’s value has been pretty stable for the last one month. Now compare that with
MaidSafeCoin.
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The Japanese Candlestick Charts
By far the most popular chart out there. If you have even visited an exchange’s website, then there is a
chance that you have seen these before:
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The graph above is the daily candlestick chart for BTC/USDT in Binance. What we are going to do
now is to help you make sense out of those pretty patterns. The first thing you will notice is the red and
green candlesticks lying one after another. Each candle shows you the price movement of the asset
during a specific time interval.
So, what does each of these candlesticks represent?
Along with the closing price, each candle shows the opening price, the lowest, and highest price of the
given time-period as well as the closing price. As you can also see, there are to kinds of candlesticks,
the green candle, and the red candle.
Every candle has a body and a couple of shadows that are sticking out of it. The body shows you the
difference between the opening and closing price. The shadows show you how high or how low have
these opening and closing prices have gone respectively. In a green candle, the upper shadow is the
close price while the lower shadow in the open price and vice-versa for red candlesticks.
The beauty of these candlesticks is that it clearly shows you exactly where the market turned and helps
you identify different patterns which may help you predict how the market will act.
Having said that, let’s look at three bullish and bearish reversal patterns on our candlestick graph.
Bullish Reversal Patterns
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#1 Hammer
The Bullish Engulfing Pattern is a 2-candle pattern. This is how you recognize this:
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The first candle is bearish while the second candle is bullish.
The body of the second candle completely overwhelms and covers the first candle.
What does this pattern mean:
• On the bearish candle, the sellers are in control.
• On the second candle, the bulls hit back with a strong rally and completely overwhelmed the
bears.
The reason why this is such a great indicator is that the bulls have increasingly stronger momentum
#3 Morning Star
A morning star is a 3-candle bullish reversal pattern which forms after a decline in the price. This is
how you recognize it:
• The first candle is bearish in nature.
• The second candle has an extremely small range.
• The third candle exhibits an aggressive upwards momentum.
Why does it do that?
• The sellers are in control as the price closes lower in the first candle.
• The second candle is an intriguing one as the buyers and sellers pretty much cancel each other
out here.
• In the third candle, the buyers completely take over and close the price higher.
The morning star pattern tells you that the sellers have been exhausted after fighting with the buyers
and the market is now bullish.
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#1 Shooting Star
The shooting star is a 1-candle bearish reversal pattern. This is how you recognize it:
• Little to no lower shadow.
• Price closes at the bottom ¼ of the range.
• Upper shadow is about 2 or 3 times the length of the body.
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So, how do you recognize this pattern?
• The first candle is bullish in nature.
• The second candle is bearish and large enough to overwhelm the first candle.
This is what the Bearish Engulfing Pattern means:
• The buyers are in control in the first candle.
• However, the sellers take over and the selling momentum is so strong that the market closes
lower than the previous candle’s low.
The Bearish Engulfing Pattern tells you the sellers have overwhelmed the buyers and are now in
control
#3 Evening Star
An Evening Star is a 3-candle bearish reversal candlestick pattern. This is how you recognize this
pattern:
• The first candle has a bullish close.
• The second candle has a small range.
• The third candle has an aggressive bearish close.
What does this pattern mean?
• The first candle shows that the buyers have taken control and closed the price higher.
• The second candle is a standoff between the bulls and bears.
• The third candle shows that bullish momentum has been exhausted and the sellers have taken
over.
The Evening Star tells you the buyers are exhausted and the sellers are momentarily in control.
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magnitude of recent gains to recent losses to determine whether crypto has been overbought or
oversold.
The formula looks like this:
RSI = 100 – (100/(1-RS))
In the equation above, RS is the ratio between the average of the days the coin was up to the average of
the days the coin was down.
Now, thankfully you don’t need to bother about calculating anything, because the exchange will do it
for you.
So, let’s take a look into how the RSI graph looks like. We will check the BTC/USDT chart from
binance.
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Keep in mind, we are checking the daily RSI.
Ok, so there are a few things to keep in mind when we are checking the RSI graph.
• The RSI ranges from 0 to 100
• When the RSI for a particular coin approaches 70 or even crosses 70, then it is considered to be
“overbought” aka the crypto in question is getting overvalued, so it may go down.
• On the other hand, if RSI approaches 30, then the crypto is undervalued and will probably go up
in value soon.
While RSI is a pretty useful indicator, the truth is that it isn’t immune to false buy and false sell signal
which can be created by either a large rally or a significant drop in the price of the crypto. This is why
RSI should be a tool that you use along with other indicators to predict the future price of a coin.
So, let’s look into our RSI graph, especially in this section:
Around 14th November, the RSI of BTC/USDT went below 30, into the undersold area. However,
since the market was down, the RSI finally went up on November end, rallied around 30 for a bit
before finally going up around 17th December.
Along with RSI, you should also look into moving average and Bollinger bands. You can learn more
here.
Support
A support level is where the price of an asset tends to stop falling. Check out the chart below.
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Upon close examination, you will see that we have chosen the $3,800 line as a support level. The
reason why we have chosen this is that at three distinct points (as highlighted by the red box), the
market came down to that level and then picked itself back up.
This can happen due to multiple reasons which we will discuss later. However, to just give you a brief
idea of how the dynamics works, the sellers (or bears) sell off the asset and bring the price down. The
moment the price comes down to a certain level, in this case, $3,800 and the buyers storm back in and
“bounce” the price of the asset off this level.
If the sellers are carrying enough momentum and actually manage to breach past this level, the price
will continue falling until it reaches another support level. Eg. in the following chart:
The price of BTC/USD broke past the first support level (red line) and then found a second support
level (pink line) which it used to bounce off of. The red line now becomes a resistance level.
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Resistance
A resistance level is a point at which the price of the asset stops rising. Check out the chart below.
Resistance is opposite to the support level. The BTC/USD daily chart found resistance at $4,250. As
you can see, the chart meets the level at four distinct points and bounces down. To show you how it
works, the buyers buy the asset until the price of the asset increases. However, once it reaches $4,250,
the sellers sell the asset.
However, if the buyers have enough momentum to breach past $4,250, then the price will continue to
rise until it reaches another resistance level. Upon the breach, the $4,250 resistance level now becomes
support. Check this out:
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Here BTC/USD broke past $7,000 resistance (red line) and then reached second resistance at $7,800.
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#2 Price falling through support
Price can fall through a support level and meet support at another level. In this case, the original
support level becomes resistance. So this is how the three participants act now:
• The traders who go long will wait for the price to come up to the original support level and sell
their assets there to limit losses.
• This plays in the hands of the short traders who will want to add more to their position.
Finally, traders who haven’t entered the market yet will decide to go short.
So, this support line becomes a great level where all the three kinds of traders can sell at.
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