Styles & Sectors: Chart Technical Analysis

This strategy generates Buy & Sell signals using price action alone,
depending only on information available at the time. It combines three elements
- annual rates of change, moving averages and divergence. Buy & sell signals are
represented by red arrows embedded in the price index.
In each chart the index is shown by the bold white line on the right hand axis.
The moving average is represented by the thin white line alongside on the same
axis. The explanatory variable, the momentum indicator, is the thin yellow line
using the left hand axis. For comparability, indices have been rebased to set
year-end 1994 at 100.
The first element is based on the observation that the psychological effect of a
shock takes about a year to wear off. Known as the Coppock Indicator, after the
man who successfully applied the concept for forecasting the US stock market
over many decades, this momentum indicator is designed to generate buy signals.
In statistical terms momentum is defined here as a time-weighted moving average
of monthly changes. Buy signals are generated when the rate of change turns up
from a level below zero line, as shown by up arrows.
However, owing to the different character of market peaks, the Coppock Indicator
has been supplemented by a second element, which uses moving averages to
generate sell signals. These arise when the stock market index falls below its
moving average, while above zero, as shown by down arrows.
The third element is necessary to offset the possibility of trend-based charting
strategies generating buy and sell signals at the worst possible times. To
reduce this risk, our strategy therefore also includes an overbought / oversold
component. By combining three proven components in one strategy, overall
performance can often be dramatic.
Please note that signals may be late at times of crisis, because they are based
on month-end prices, rather than automatically on reaching targets during the
month.
Back-testing shows that this combination of three elements is much more
effective than reliance on a single charting technique. It has continued to
perform well, despite the financial crisis of 2008.