Yesterday I threw away all the indicators I have been using. A lot of dirt has cluttered my screen for too long.
I have also made many custom ones, I threw them out too. But I kept just one, a moving average.
Every* indicator refers to price after all. In the end, price discounts everything.
No price indicator can tell us something price doesn't tell. The sayings of price are hard to understand. That is why most of us use indicators to clear the picture.
*Well there are indicators that measure stuff that is not directly embedded into price action like volume, inflation etc.
RSI is the most used indicator for like, ever...

The same story, told by different indicators.
I have heard that the best analysts use very few indicators on their charts.
Volume and candle pattern/trend analysis is hardcore. These are some of the very few instruments of an experienced analyst.
Indicators are there to help us get some perspective on how prices work. Many of them must be thrown away when an analyst is experienced enough.
Clear information is power.
But all of that, I didn't know all of this time. After abandoning RSI I sought other methods of analysis. Stochastic RSI and KST prove powerful methods of momentum analysis.

In the end, most indicators refer closely to the original price action. It is just the perspective that changes.
So what does trend analysis tell us about equities right now?
I am purposefully hiding price action.


Annoyingly simple.
Final chart, Bitcoin:

I will keep using a Keltner-ish Channel since it provides a pure, automatic way to get a feel of how far above or below trend we are.
Clean up.
I have also made many custom ones, I threw them out too. But I kept just one, a moving average.
Every* indicator refers to price after all. In the end, price discounts everything.
No price indicator can tell us something price doesn't tell. The sayings of price are hard to understand. That is why most of us use indicators to clear the picture.
*Well there are indicators that measure stuff that is not directly embedded into price action like volume, inflation etc.
RSI is the most used indicator for like, ever...
The same story, told by different indicators.
I have heard that the best analysts use very few indicators on their charts.
Volume and candle pattern/trend analysis is hardcore. These are some of the very few instruments of an experienced analyst.
Indicators are there to help us get some perspective on how prices work. Many of them must be thrown away when an analyst is experienced enough.
Clear information is power.
But all of that, I didn't know all of this time. After abandoning RSI I sought other methods of analysis. Stochastic RSI and KST prove powerful methods of momentum analysis.
In the end, most indicators refer closely to the original price action. It is just the perspective that changes.
So what does trend analysis tell us about equities right now?
I am purposefully hiding price action.
Annoyingly simple.
Final chart, Bitcoin:
I will keep using a Keltner-ish Channel since it provides a pure, automatic way to get a feel of how far above or below trend we are.
Clean up.
Note
Curiously, now is happening the exact opposite. A bearish Monthly chart is trapping the last bears. Bullish sub-month charts signal strength. Again just like 1991.Note
Butterfly EffectWe never know how many timeframes will fail. We can just sit there and watch.
There is nothing that one can predict. And no artificial intelligence can predict.
AI can easily feed the masses with lies. I'll be there waiting when the entire trading community plays with tools AI made, and I will patiently listen to people pretend to win in a game they didn't make.
Note
How much effort does it take for a bull signal to be u-turned?Note
PLUG looks good right now, it is a fair price.Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.
Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.