People become so confused by what is happening with short -
term oscillators, moving averages, chart formations, and other mumbo - jumbo that these things begin to dominate all other considerations.
As with the moving avenge, the number of days chosen to compute the oscillator can vary, with shorter
term oscillators (5 day) producing a more sensitive line with more pronounced oscillations.
A longer
term oscillator (20 days) produces a smoother line in which the oscillator swings are less pronounced.
Not exact matches
My own proprietary
oscillator indicates that we are very close to a short -
term bounce point.
Im using heiken ashi candles, two volume weighted moving averages and the awesome
oscillator to assess trend on daily timeframe, with check on weekly for longer
term.
The
oscillator can also be used to provide the technician with an advance warning of short
term market extremes, commonly referred to as overbought and oversold conditions.
Buying oversold dips are based on buying a long
term price support level or an oversold
oscillator like the 30 RSI, a price extension far from the 10 day EMA, or a -80 to -100 $ NYMO.
This TRIVARIATE is just one of the LONG
TERM PRIMARY
oscillators of CLIMATE Coby.
The
term synchronization as used here describes how two or more coupled nonlinear
oscillators adjust their (initially different) natural rhythms to a common frequency and constant relative phase.
Can one describe the climate system as a (weakly) periodically forced nonlinear
oscillator, in
terms of the interaction of its internal nonlinear dynamics with external periodic forcing?
Japanese Candlestick Analysis corroborates the
oscillators, pointing to higher bitcoin prices in the short -
term, kicking off a longer -
term bull run.
Moreover, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and Stochastic
oscillators show oversold conditions but also show bulls may continue to hold the reins in the short
term over the course of the day.
Looking at the 4 - hour window shows RSI Stochastic
oscillators also indicate some bearish short -
term sentiment.