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Lesson 5: Basics of Technical Analysis

Technical analysis is a method traders use to study price movements in order to identify potential trading opportunities. Instead of focusing on economic news or political events, technical analysis relies on charts, patterns, and indicators to understand market behaviour.

This lesson introduces the core concepts every beginner should understand before using technical tools in real trading.


5.1 What Is Technical Analysis?

Technical analysis is the study of price action and trading volume to forecast possible future price movements.

In forex trading, this means analysing currency pair charts using visual tools and indicators. The main belief behind technical analysis is that:

All available market information is already reflected in the price.

Rather than asking why the market is moving, technical analysis focuses on how it is moving.

By studying historical price patterns, trends, and momentum, traders attempt to estimate:

  • Market direction

  • Trend strength

  • Possible reversal points

Subjectivity in Technical Analysis

One common criticism of technical analysis is that it can be subjective. Two traders may look at the same chart and reach different conclusions.

This difference usually comes from:

  • Tool selection

  • Timeframe choice

  • Personal interpretation

With experience, consistency improves. Learning how experienced traders apply technical analysis can significantly speed up the learning curve.

Traders who primarily rely on charts and indicators are called technical traders.


5.2 Candlestick Charts

Technical analysis is almost always performed on price charts, and the most widely used chart type is the candlestick chart.

Candlestick charts display four key price points for each time period:

  • Open

  • High

  • Low

  • Close

This format makes it easier to understand:

  • Market direction

  • Buyer and seller strength

  • Trend changes

By analysing individual candlesticks and candlestick patterns, traders can spot:

  • Trend continuations

  • Trend reversals

  • Market indecision

Candlestick charts also work extremely well with other tools such as:

  • Trendlines

  • Support and resistance

  • Moving averages

📌 For a refresher on candlestick patterns, revisit Lesson 3: Essentials of Chart Reading.


5.3 Trendlines

Trendlines are one of the simplest and most powerful tools in technical analysis.

They help traders visualise market direction, which generally falls into three categories:

  • Uptrend

  • Downtrend

  • Sideways (range-bound) trend

How Trendlines Work

Trendlines are drawn by connecting:

  • Higher lows in an uptrend

  • Lower highs in a downtrend

  • Horizontal price points in a range

Trendlines help traders:

  • Identify trend direction

  • Anticipate potential price reactions

  • Estimate future support or resistance areas

As a general rule:

  • Trendlines drawn over longer time periods tend to be more reliable

  • Multiple price touches strengthen the validity of a trendline


5.4 Support and Resistance

Support and resistance levels represent key price zones where price tends to react.

Resistance

  • A price level where upward movement slows or stops

  • Acts as a “ceiling” for price

Support

  • A price level where downward movement slows or stops

  • Acts as a “floor” for price

Price often moves in a zigzag pattern between support and resistance levels.

Role Reversal of Support and Resistance

Market conditions can cause these levels to switch roles:

  • When price breaks above resistance during an uptrend, resistance becomes new support

  • When price breaks below support during a downtrend, support becomes new resistance

Identifying these levels helps traders:

  • Plan entry points

  • Set stop-loss levels

  • Manage risk more effectively


5.5 Relative Strength Index (RSI)

The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum indicator used to identify whether a market is overbought or oversold.

RSI values range from:

  • 0 → Extremely oversold

  • 100 → Extremely overbought

Common RSI Levels

  • Below 30 → Oversold conditions

  • Above 70 → Overbought conditions

RSI is useful for identifying potential reversal zones, but it should never be used alone.

During strong trends, RSI can remain overbought or oversold for extended periods, making it unreliable as a standalone signal.

Best practice:
Use RSI as a confirmation tool, not a decision-maker.


5.6 Moving Averages

A moving average smooths price data to help traders identify the overall trend direction.

It is considered a lagging indicator because it relies on past price data.

Commonly Used Moving Averages

  • 50-period moving average

  • 200-period moving average

Moving averages help traders:

  • Filter out market noise

  • Identify trend direction

  • Spot dynamic support and resistance levels

Moving Average Crossovers

Traders often use two moving averages together:

  • Short-term (e.g., 50-period)

  • Long-term (e.g., 200-period)

Signals:

  • Short MA crossing above long MA → Bullish trend

  • Short MA crossing below long MA → Bearish trend

Types of Moving Averages

  • Simple Moving Average (SMA): Equal weight to all prices

  • Exponential Moving Average (EMA): More weight to recent prices

EMA reacts faster to price changes and is preferred by short-term traders.


5.7 Technical Analysis vs Fundamental Analysis

These two approaches differ in focus but complement each other well.

Fundamental Analysis

  • Focuses on economic data and global events

  • Answers why price might move

Technical Analysis

  • Focuses on charts and indicators

  • Answers when to enter or exit trades

Using Both Together

Example:

  • A trader expects a currency to strengthen due to an upcoming political or economic event

  • Technical analysis is used to confirm trend direction and entry timing

  • If technical signals are unclear or conflicting, the trader may delay or hedge the trade

For beginners, learning both approaches provides a stronger foundation and better decision-making skills.


Module Summary

  • Technical analysis studies price action using charts and indicators

  • Candlestick charts are the most widely used chart type

  • Trendlines help identify market direction

  • Support and resistance mark key price levels

  • RSI helps identify overbought and oversold conditions

  • Moving averages smooth price data and indicate trends

  • SMA and EMA differ in how price data is weighted

  • Technical and fundamental analysis work best when used together