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- Wiley
More About This Title FULL VIEW INTEGRATED TECHNICAL ANALYSIS: A SYSTEMATIC APPROACH TO ACTIVE STOCK MARKET INVESTING
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Has the bear market ended? Is the rebound lasting? Everybody wants an answer but nobody can provide one with a good degree of confidence. While fundamental analysis is notoriously weak when it comes to market timing decisions and price target forecasts, technical analysis is equally timid in providing any concrete answers to the above fundamentally important questions for market participants. No existing system has produced a firm answer with a respectable degree of conviction.
This book will present a system to answer those questions with a high degree of confidence.
Xin Xie is the Director for Institute of International Trade and Investment at the Upper Yangtze River Economic Research Center, Chongqing University of Business and Technology and PRC Ministry of Education. He has a PhD in Economics from Columbia University in New York and a Master of Arts Degree in Statistics at Zhongnan University of Finance in China. He has extensive experiences in banking and investment industries as Senior Economists and Strategists in Bank of America and UBS AG.
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1 The Need for a Full View Integrated Approach.
1.1 The Motivation.
1.2 The Necessity of FVITA.
1.3 Random Walk?
2 Two Basic Elements of Market Dynamics.
2.1 Oscillators—An Overview.
2.2 The Oscillator of Choice—Stochastics.
2.3 Trend Indicator—Moving Average.
2.4 Trend Indicator—Moving Average Convergence/Divergence.
2.5 Adaptive Trend Indicators.
2.6 Adaptive Oscillators.
2.7 Other Tools of Technical Analysis.
3 Multi-Screen Systems.
3.1 The Need for Multi-Screen Approaches.
3.2 Triple Screens.
3.3 Extended Interval Charts in FVITA—Daily and Up.
3.4 Intra-Day Interval Charts in FVITA.
4 Bounded, Interval-Specifi c Bull and Bear Markets.
4.1 Interval-Specifi c Bull and Bear Market I—Concept.
4.2 Interval-Specifi c Bull and Bear Market II—Criteria.
4.3 Interval-Specifi c Bull and Bear Market III—Limits of Countermovements.
4.4 Triple Screen System Under Full View.
5 Market Turning Points and Duration of Pauses.
5.1 Support and Resistance.
5.2 Bollinger Bands.
5.3 Waves.
5.4 Turning Points after Eight and R9 Observations.
5.5 Thrust.
5.6 Type I, II, and III Pauses.
6 Trend Reversals vs. Temporary Countertrends.
6.1 Trend Reversals.
6.2 Without the Two-Day Chart.
6.3 Running Space after Trend Reversal.
6.4 Temporary Countertrends.
6.5 Straight Pauses.
6.6 Exception 1: Composite Bottoming-Up and Composite Topping-Off.
6.7 Exception 2: Approaching the Turning Point.
6.8 Relationship between Low- and High-Order Signals.
6.9 Trading Strategies on Trend Signals.
7 Pauses Under Different Market Conditions.
7.1 Pausing-Down from a Historical New High.
7.2 Pauses Against Temporary Trends.
7.3 Trading Strategies for Pauses.
8 Case Studies.
8.1 Case 1: The 2007 Financial Market Crisis—DJIA.
8.2 Case 2: The 2000 High-Tech Bubble and its Aftermath—DJIA.
8.3 Case 3: The 1990 Bubble and Fall—Topix.
8.4 Case 4: The 2003 Rebound and 2007 Crash.
8.5 Case 5: The 2007 Crash—Shanghai Composite Index.
9 Random Walk, Effi cient Market vs. Market Activism.
9.1 Efficient Market Hypothesis—The Roots 208.
9.2 Efficient Market Hypothesis—The Evidence.
9.3 EMH, Market Activism and the $100 Bill Story.
9.4 Flawed Empirical Observations Against Market Activism.
9.5 A Fund to Show Effective Market Activision.
9.6 A Theoretical Argument for Technical Analysis.
10 Integrating Macro, Fundamental, Quantitative and Technical Analysis.
10.1 The Fragmented State of Market Analysis.
10.2 Integrating Different Technical Analyses Under FVITA.
10.3 Macroeconomic Analysis and FVITA.
10.3.1 Integrated Approach to News Processing.
10.3.2 Integrated Analysis of Bubbles and Panics.
10.4 Firm Fundamentals and FVITA 248.
10.5 Options and FVITA.
11 Other Issues.
11.1 Statistical Analysis.
11.2 Technical Analysis as Public Knowledge.
12 Concluding Remarks.
Glossary.
References.
Index.
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-- The Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES Magazine
Xin Xie's method is reminiscent of Krausz, Elder, and DeMark but taken to the next level. He's identified new price patterns that provide a fresh approach to trading and has put his ideas together in a thoroughly clear and systematic way. Traders and technical analysts should be delighted to take each component and find new ways to profit.
-- Perry J. Kaufman, Author of New Trading Systems and Methods, 4th Edition (John Wiley 2005)and A Short Course in Technical Trading (John Wiley 2003)
The wilder the international economic dislocations in financial markets, the higher is the interest in technical analysis. Xin Xie's excellent book starts where today's basic technical analysis ends and fails. The book takes a conceptually fresh approach which Xin Xie calls FVITA. He succeeds at addressing the two main shortcomings of technical analysis-fixed parameter values and a lack of communication between myriads of technical indicators-which must be overcome in order to more safely identify changes in trends, which is the most important goal of technical analysis. Xin Xie's highly sophisticated concept not only highlights the source of failures in existing technical analysis but shows that FVITA increases the robustness of forecasts by providing a systematic view of market dynamics and interferences, resulting in effectively linking fundamentals with technical analysis. Xin Xie's impressive expertise makes this book a must read for technical analysts who wish to acquire a more robust and faster tool set in identifying changes in important market trends which in our times often come with tectonic force. Technical analysis will never be the same after Xin Xie's brilliant book.
-- Alfred Signer, Dr. oec. HSG, Former Managing Director, Country Research and Risk Controlling, UBS AG