Moving Averages Explained
Moving Averages are some of the oldest technical indicators and still remain some of the most useful indicators for market analysis using the technical analysis approach. In simple terms moving average is the average price of the security at a specified point in time. A moving average tries to exhibit a trend in the prices. The purpose of moving average is to show the trend of a stock/security in a smoothed manner with a single line with less apparent volatility. Moving averages give unique signals that can be used in conjunction with other traditional chart patterns like the MACD, etc.Types of Moving Averages in Technical Analysis and Calculating Moving Averages
Common Moving averages can be classified as Simple Moving Averages, Weighted Moving Averages or Exponential Moving Averages. To calculate simple moving average whether it is 10 days or 50days one adds the price of 10 days and divides by 10 or the 50 days and divide by 50 as the case may be. For the next day calculation, drop the last data and add the latest data point and re calculate the average, in this way the average keeps on moving forward with every new data point being generated. In order to calculate the weighted moving average, the oldest data point is assigned with the weight 1 which increases incrementally for all data points which is then divided by weighted average of number of days of moving average being constructed. Exponential moving average is similar to weighted average but with slightly different calculation but keeps the core philosophy same by assigning more importance to the latest data by assigning weights in such a manner that the recent data points are assigned an exponentially higher weight that previous old data points in the series. The Exponential moving average captures recent trends faster than the simple moving average. One important factor that traders should consider while calculating moving averages is that the charts of the stocks/underlying security are adjusted for all corporate actions such as M&A, stock splits, bonuses etc otherwise the moving averages that are calculated can be distorted. Here's a moving average example of an incorrect distorted chart where the correct corporate action adjustments were not made. Moving averages can be calculated on alternative prices i.e. closing price/open/high/low/adjusted close but in most case the closing price for the day is considered. [caption id="attachment_1293" align="aligncenter" width="2472"] Incorrect Moving Average Example. MA line as seen in Green.[/caption]List of the types of moving averages used in Technical Analysis
- Simple Moving Average - SMA
- Exponential Moving Average - EMA
- Weighted Moving Average
- Time Series Moving Average
- Triangular Moving Average
- Variable Moving Average
- VIDYA Moving Average
- Welles Wilder Moving Average
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