Generating a Multi-Timeframe Trading Strategy based on Three Exponential Moving Averages and a Stochastic Oscillator
This study combines a fundamental analysis of the rationale for conservative investors’ transactions, as well as long-term, low-risk strategies, and a technical analysis of the search for entry points into short-term, high-risk speculation. A hypothesis about the possible adaptation of high-risk for...
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Published in | International Journal of Technology Vol. 11; no. 6; pp. 1233 - 1243 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Universitas Indonesia
07.12.2020
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | This study combines a fundamental analysis of the rationale for conservative investors’ transactions, as well as long-term, low-risk strategies, and a technical analysis of the search for entry points into short-term, high-risk speculation. A hypothesis about the possible adaptation of high-risk foreign-exchange-market strategies to a low-risk stock market, based on a multi-timeframe analysis of the intersection of 3 EMA plus stochastic (a combination of three moving averages and a stochastic oscillator), is proven. The study’s modeling is based on walk-forward, blind simulation, cross procedure for realistically testing a hypothesis that can be performed in nine steps (Colby, 2003.) Colby’s algorithm Its subject is ordinary shares of Sberbank of Russia, and its analysis shows an absence of uncharacteristic movements in the chosen period of maximum volatility, from 2007 to the present. This analysis was conducted for two timeframes (more than five years for the trend direction and less than three years for the entry point). For the EMA, parameters were set at 20, 50, and 200; for stochastic parameters were set at 14, 3, and 3, 80/20. The “failure swing” reversal pattern and new support and resistance lines were detected. The study’s main conclusions are that the simultaneous use of three EMAs makes determining a corridor or a trend fairly reliable, as well as setting stop-losses. Moreover, the use of an oscillator is found not to always be reasonable; its main task is to confirm a signal. A stochastic oscillator with an explicit trend should not be analyzed for the whole period under consideration—only the last values should be considered. Moving averages and oscillators give fewer false signals on medium-term timeframes than on short-term timeframes. Due to a change in trend direction, identifying new (defined and correct) support and resistance lines is found to be necessary. |
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ISSN: | 2086-9614 2087-2100 |
DOI: | 10.14716/ijtech.v11i6.4445 |