Traders payouts since 2025: $26,769,485

Learn the Basics of Technical Analysis

Module 5 – Stock & Forex Trading Basics

Technical analysis is a popular approach traders use to understand market behaviour by studying price charts, patterns, and indicators. Instead of focusing on company financials or news, it assumes that all available market information is already reflected in the price.

By analysing historical price movements and trading volume, traders aim to anticipate future price direction, momentum, and potential trading opportunities.


6.1 What Is Technical Analysis?

Technical analysis is a method of analysing financial markets by examining price action and trading volume using charts and indicators.

The core belief behind technical analysis is:

Price reflects everything.

This means that economic data, company news, market sentiment, and global events are already priced into the market. Therefore, by studying how prices move, traders can gain insight into market psychology, trends, and momentum.

Technical analysis focuses on:

  • Identifying trends

  • Recognising price patterns

  • Timing trade entries and exits

One common criticism of technical analysis is its subjectivity. Two traders may analyse the same chart and reach different conclusions. This usually happens due to:

  • Different tools being used

  • Different timeframes

  • Individual interpretation

However, with practice, consistency, and experience, traders can significantly improve their accuracy. Studying how experienced traders interpret charts can also help speed up the learning curve.

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


6.2 Candlestick Charts

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

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

  • Open

  • High

  • Low

  • Close

Each candlestick visually summarises what happened during a trading period (minutes, hours, days, or weeks).

By studying:

  • Individual candlesticks

  • Groups of candlesticks

  • Repeating patterns

Traders can identify:

  • Trend direction

  • Market strength

  • Potential reversals

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

  • Trendlines

  • Support and resistance

  • Moving averages

📌 Tip: Refer back to Module 4: Essentials of Chart Reading for a refresher on candlestick anatomy and patterns.


6.3 Trendlines

Trendlines are simple yet powerful tools used to visualise the direction of price movement.

A trendline is drawn by connecting:

  • Higher lows during an uptrend

  • Lower highs during a downtrend

Markets generally move in three phases:

  1. Uptrend – prices rise

  2. Downtrend – prices fall

  3. Sideways (range) – prices consolidate

Trendlines help traders:

  • Identify existing trends

  • Estimate future support or resistance

  • Anticipate potential breakouts or reversals

Trendlines are flexible — traders choose where to draw them based on visible price structure.
📌 The longer the timeframe used, the more reliable the trendline tends to be.


6.4 Support and Resistance

Support and resistance are key price levels where the market tends to pause, reverse, or react strongly.

  • Support: A price level where buying interest prevents further decline

  • Resistance: A price level where selling pressure limits further rise

Markets often move between these levels for extended periods.

Role Reversal

Support and resistance can switch roles:

  • In a bullish market, price may break above resistance — that level can become new support

  • In a bearish market, price may fall below support — that level can become new resistance

Identifying these levels helps traders:

  • Manage risk

  • Set stop-loss and take-profit points

  • Avoid emotional decision-making


6.5 Relative Strength Index (RSI)

The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum indicator that measures whether a market is overbought or oversold.

RSI ranges from 0 to 100:

  • Above 70 → Overbought

  • Below 30 → Oversold

RSI is commonly used to:

  • Spot potential reversals

  • Identify weakening momentum

However, RSI should never be used alone, especially in volatile markets where it can remain overbought or oversold for extended periods.

📌 Best practice: Use RSI as a confirmation tool, not a standalone signal.


6.6 Moving Averages

A moving average smooths price data to help traders identify trend direction and reduce market noise.

It is a lagging indicator, meaning it reacts after price has moved.

The most commonly used moving averages are:

  • 50-period moving average

  • 200-period moving average

Moving averages help traders:

  • Identify trends

  • Locate dynamic support and resistance

  • Confirm trend strength

Moving Average Crossovers

Using two moving averages together can signal trend changes:

  • 50 MA crossing above 200 MA → Bullish signal

  • 50 MA crossing below 200 MA → Bearish signal

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.


6.7 Fundamental Analysis vs Technical Analysis

Fundamental and technical analysis take very different approaches:

Fundamental AnalysisTechnical Analysis
Focuses on economic data, company performance, and newsFocuses on price charts and indicators
Answers what to tradeAnswers when to trade
Long-term valuation basedShort- to medium-term timing

Rather than choosing one over the other, many traders combine both.

Example:

A trader believes an upcoming political or economic event may strengthen a currency or stock (fundamental view).
They then use technical analysis to:

  • Confirm trend direction

  • Identify entry points

  • Manage risk

If technical signals contradict the fundamental idea, the trader may delay, adjust, or hedge the trade.

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

 


Module Recap

  • Technical analysis studies price action and volume

  • Candlestick charts are the most commonly used chart type

  • Trendlines help visualise market direction

  • Support and resistance highlight key price levels

  • RSI indicates overbought and oversold conditions

  • Moving averages smooth price and identify trends

  • SMA and EMA differ in responsiveness

  • Combining technical and fundamental analysis can improve trading decisions