Technical Analysis

Technical Analysis is one of the main tools we use at Best Ad Advertising every day as we analysis a number of company's overall performance. We know technical analysis of your company's share price in relation to it trading on the open market is key to bringing in new investors. Fundamentals are most important to any company but strong investments from shareholders and future shareholders lie in the technical analysis of that company along with the clear professional manner its presented.

Technical Analysis Services

Charts We Use

When it comes to the types of charts we use while analyzing your company we do not leave a indicator behind. Their are four different charts we compare on your ticker symbol while most investor relations firms fail to understand more then one.

The first and most used type of stock chart we analyze your company with is the Candle Stick Chart. The candle stick charts are great at showing you the precise open, close, high and low of the day formation based on color of the candle and height of each candle as you analyze the company stock on a specific time it traded. Mostly viewed on six month charts but it can be viewed on ten day thirty minute charts in great detail. Learning these charts takes years of teaching in technical analysis to do. Each candle is specifically designed to show a bullish or bearish formation based on the previous candles that formed in trading the days before. We thrive in knowing every aspect of candle stick charts.

The second and most used type of stock chart we analyze your company with is the Point and Figure Chart. This was used heavily in the early 1990's as it would spot the relative formation of a uptrend and downtrend faster based on precise supports and resistances unlike the candle stick chart. On a P&F chart price movements are combined into either a rising column of X's or a falling column of O's. If you are familiar with standard chart analysis, you can think of each column as representing either an uptrend or a downtrend. Each X or O occupies what is called a box on the chart. Each chart has a setting called the Box Size that is the amount that a stock needs to move above the top of the current column of X's (or below the bottom of the current column of O's) before another X (or O) is added to that column. Each chart has a second setting called the Reversal Amount that determines the amount that a stock needs to move in the opposite direction (down if we are in a rising column of X's, up for a column of O's) before a reversal occurs. Whenever this reversal threshold is crossed, a new column is started right next to the previous one, only moving in the opposite direction.

The third type of stock chart we analyze your company with is the Renko Chart. The Renko Charts are price charts with rising and falling diagonal lines of boxes that are either filled or hollow. Renko charts are "time independent" charts that do not have constantly spaced time axes. We like to use the Renko Charts because they have a pre-determined "Brick Size" that is used to determine when new bricks are added to the chart to show if your company share price is increasing faster. If prices move more than the Brick Size above the top (or below the bottom) of the last brick on the chart, a new brick is added in the next chart column. Hollow bricks are added if prices are rising. Black bricks are added if prices are falling. Only one type of brick can be added per time period. These Renko Charts are just another chart we analyze to give you the full view of what your company stock looks like by the skilled investor.

The fourth type of stock chart we analyze your company with is the Kagi Chart. The Kagi charts are great at showing the downtrend and uptrend in your company stock alot faster. The Kagi price charts with thick and thin vertical lines connected by short horizontal lines. Just like P&F charts, Kagi charts only add a new vertical line when prices have reversed enough to cancel the current uptrend or downtrend. Until such a reversal occurs, a Kagi chart will only move up (or down) in its current column. Kagi charts do not have constantly spaced time axes. Similar to the Chinese ying and yang in health people at Best Ad Advertising like to call them the health charts. The thickness of the Kagi line changes depending on price action. The thick line is called the yang line and the thin line is called the yin line. The locations where the line changed from moving higher to moving lower are called "shoulders" and the locations where the line changed from moving lower to moving higher are called "waists". Whenever a yin (thin) line moves above the previous shoulder, it turns into a yang (thick) line. Similarly, whenever a yang line moves below the previous waist, it turns into a yin line.

Chart Analysis

In Depth Analysis of each function of the company based on the technical chart side of your company is what we provide daily at Best Ad Advertising to your company.

Technical Tools

Supports and Resistances are key to analyzing your company stock. Support and resistance represent key junctures where the forces of supply and demand meet. In the financial markets, prices are driven by excessive supply (down) and demand (up). Supply is synonymous with bearish, bears and selling. Demand is synonymous with bullish, bulls and buying. As demand increases, prices advance and as supply increases, prices decline. When supply and demand are equal, prices move sideways as bulls and bears slug it out for control.
Trend Lines are another important key into seeing what kind of uptrend or downtrend your company stock is in and if a shareholder should invest in your company when its showing decrease in demand. Trend Lines are an important tool in technical analysis for both trend identification and confirmation. A trend line is a straight line that connects two or more price points and then extends into the future to act as a line of support or resistance. Many of the principles applicable to support and resistance levels can be applied to trend lines as well.

Gaps and Gap Analysis is one of the most important things traders key on when looking to invest in your company stock based on stock history. This can be good or bad because if your company gaps up this shows sign of undervalue in the company fundamentally and the price per share is undervalued. Gaping down can mean bad earnings or news in the form of press release. We key in on these gaps with your shareholders to show why they happened because its very volatile to the average shareholder.

Chart Patterns really make up what traders look for when investing in your company stock almost every time. There are a number of chart patterns we follow based on your stock that we can showcase to your investors. Here is a list of some: Double Top (Reversal), Double Bottom (Reversal), Head and Shoulders Top (Reversal), Head and Shoulders Bottom (Reversal), Falling Wedge (Reversal), Rising Wedge (Reversal), Rounding Bottom (Reversal), Triple Top (Reversal), Triple Bottom (Reversal), Bump and Run Reversal (Reversal), Flag, Pennant (Continuation), Symmetrical Triangle (Continuation), Ascending Triangle (Continuation), Descending Triangle (Continuation), Rectangle (Continuation), Price Channel (Continuation), Measured Move -, Bullish (Continuation), Measured Move - Bearish (Continuation), Cup with Handle (Continuation). All of these are very important if you want the full scope of what investors want to see in your company. We can analyze better then the competition with full chart read outs for your company and investors through Best Ad Advertising.

Fibonacci has been used by us frequently at Best Ad Advertising for the company's we handle in investor relations. It is drawn out by us on the charts in specific time lengths and shows a precise percent on the stock to indicate whether its going to retract based on oversold or overbought indicators. We will use this with all the other chart analysis overlays to get the best possible outcome for your company and investors.

Chart Dates is what glues or forms all of the technical indicators and technical tools together. If your looking at a five year chart of your company you have to put all of your indicators and chart tools into that graph to see any bullish or bearish signs. That goes for doing the same thing with your three year chart, one year, six month, three month, one month, ten day, five day, one day and even your thirty second, five second charts.

Level 2 trained and skilled in every market cap. Best Ads knows all the market makers that make up level two. We follow them and record daily their activities under your company to see what they doing in the form of wholesaling or diluting.

Without knowing how to incorporate all these tools together into charting you would be lost. For years we have helped companies form technical skills that are priceless to the future growth of the company financially.

Technical Indicators & Overlays

Bollinger Bands is a chart overlay that shows the upper and lower limits of 'normal' price movements based on the Standard Deviation of prices.

Ichimoku Clouds is a comprehensive indicator that defines support and resistance, identifies trend direction, gauges momentum and provides trading signals.

Keltner Channels is a chart overlay that shows upper and lower limits for price movements based on the Average True Range of prices.

Moving Averages is chart overlays that show the 'average' value over time. Both Simple Moving Averages (SMAs) and Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) are explained.

Moving Average Envelopes is a chart overlay consisting of a channel formed from simple moving averages.

Parabolic SAR is a chart overlay that shows reversal points below prices in an uptrend and above prices in a downtrend.

Price Channels is a chart overlay that shows a channel made from the highest high and lowest low for a given period of time.

Volume by Price is a chart overlay with a horizontal histogram showing the amount of activity at various price levels.

ZigZag is a chart overlay that shows filtered price movements that are greater than a given percentage.

Accumulation/Distribution combines price and volume to show how money may be flowing into or out of a stock.

Aroon shows whether a stock is trending or oscillating.

Average Directional Index (ADX) shows whether a stock is trending or oscillating.

Average True Range (ATR) measures a stock's volatility.

Bollinger Bands shows the relationship between price and Bollinger Bands.

Bollinger BandWidth shows the distance between the upper band and the lower band.

Commodity Channel Index shows a stock's variation from its 'typical' price.

Chaikin Money Flow combines price and volume to show how money may be flowing into or out of a stock.

Chaikin Oscillator combines price and volume to show how money may be flowing into or out of a stock.

Detrended Price Oscillator is a price oscillator that uses a displaced moving average to identify cycles.

Force Index is a simple price-and-volume oscillator.

MACD is a momentum oscillator based on the difference between two EMAs.

MACD-Histogram is a momentum oscillator that shows the difference between MACD and its signal line.

Money Flow Index combines a stock's 'typical' price with its volume to show how money may be flowing into or out of the stock.

On Balance Volume combines price and volume in a very simple way to show how money may be flowing into or out of a stock.

Percentage Price Oscillator is a percentage-based version of the MACD indicator.

Percentage Volume Oscillator the PPO indicator is applied to volume instead of price.

Price Relative is a technical indicator that compares the performance of two stocks to each other by dividing their price data.

Rabbitt Q-Rank is a Paul Rabbit's proprietary indicator that rates a stock based on technical and fundamental factors.

Rate of Change shows the speed at which a stock's price is changing.

Relative Strength Index shows how strongly a stock is moving in its current direction.

Slope measures the rise-over-run for a linear regression.

Standard Deviation is a statistical measure of a stock's volatility.

Stochastic Oscillator shows how a stock's price is doing relative to past movements fast, slow and full stochastics.

StochRSI combines Stochastics with the RSI indicator.

TRIX is a triple-smoothed moving average of price movements.

Ultimate Oscillator combines long-term, mid-term and short-term moving averages into one number.

Williams %R uses Stochastics to determine overbought and oversold levels.

Index Monitoring is what we master at because we can compare global index indicators and values to make sure your company reflects the global market uptrend or downtrend on your stock to shareholders. This means doing full technical analysis on some of the key index's daily like the Dow30, S&P, and Russell 3000 along with the VIX and Libor Rates and other major index's.

Services We Offer

Full Technical Analysis
Price is $50.00 per month and we can chat online or in person. We guarantee to put that $50.00 a month back in your pocket through trading once done.

We will handle the full technical analysis with all the tools and objectives that we have referenced above and more. Our competition cant beat our market knowledge or prices. We will be showing you all the results in live trading if requested or daily under the most sophisticated trading software techniques put together over years of profit and loss and fine tuning of skills. This was a quick overview of what will be included in all the services offered under investor relations and you can see more here. Please see our quote page and request investor relations services.

Individual Training

We offer individual market training to your company in the form of technical analysis. We can train one one one with you or a specific person in your company that needs to excel in market analysis. We offer training in stocks, options, and futures. Please see our quote page and request investor relations individual training.

Market Technical Analysis

Technical Indicators and Overlays

Boeing Chart

Technical Indicators

Multiple Company Chart

Technical Overlays