Specific Indicators for Trend Measurement

All TA indicators are subjective to one degree or another since you have to choose the parameters to use as input, lookback period for example. Anyhow, have look at John Ehlers work on the Instantaneous Trendline and the Decycler.

Thank you panzerman

I agree to your point regarding subjectivity.
I will have to check out John Ehlers work on Trendline, but I am afraid that it might be too hard to code for a scanner etc. and might need the trader to observe the charts one by one in order to make sense of those indicators.

Thanks and regards
 
If you buy and you are in profit, the trend is up. If you buy and you are in loss, then the trend is down. There's no subjectivity to these.

ExperiencedJoe, that is true :rolleyes: but I am looking for something that I can do BEFORE I buy or sell.

Thanks and regards
 
ExperiencedJoe, that is true :rolleyes: but I am looking for something that I can do BEFORE I buy or sell.

Thanks and regards

That's not making any sense whatsoever. So you want to know what the cake tastes like before you eat it ? Well, common sense should tell you that the only way to know is to eat it.

Trading is really as easy as eating cake. If you know how to eat cake, you can trade.
 
Last edited:
Price
Indicates the value at which a buyer and a seller agree. Does NOT indicate its own trend. No quantity indicates its own trend. That's why data manipulation is required.

The point of a trend indicator (mathematical formula or trendline) is to highlight (aka INDICATE) those features of price that are prominent during a trend. Price does not do this by itself.
 
Last edited:
Indicates the value at which a buyer and a seller agree. Does NOT indicate its own trend. No quantity indicates its own trend. That's why data manipulation is required.

The point of a trend indicator (mathematical formula or trendline) is to highlight (aka INDICATE) those features of price that are prominent during a trend. Price does not do this by itself.

Exactly :)
 
Back
Top