Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Russell TF Futures Daily Report 27th June - Technical Analysis



If you trade the S&P 500 Emini Futures, or trade the Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Rusell mini futures, or if you trade Forex and Crude Oil you need to check out www.sceeto.com for one of the worlds most advanced indicators. A no obligation Free Trial is availible.www.sceeto.com

Russell TF Futures Daily Report 27th June - Technical Analysis
Hi welcome To The Daily Report
For The Signals Generated By Sceeto
For The Russell TF Futures
on the 27th June
Please Visit http://www.sceeto.com/ for a free trial
also visit http://www.binaryforecast.com/ for a free preview
Of Wind our real time trend indicator
 You Can Forget price action and technical anaylsis
and momentum indicators they all lag
People like you are losing money every day of the week
why because of lagging indicators
Average Directional Index Commodity Channel Index
MACD Momentum Indicators Relative Strength Index (RSI)
Stochastic oscillator ,exponential trix moving average
percentage Change Breadth Indicators Advance Decline Line
McClellan Oscillator what a load of rubbish
why they all lag pure and simple
order flow is what changes price action and momentum
sceeto monitors all the buy and sell orders in milliseconds
and alerts you in real time to where the market is probably
going next it doesn't lag and helps keep you on the winning
side of trades for a change and most important it monitors
program trading
take the free trial and see how you have been missing out
thank you. Technical analysis employs models and trading rules based on price and volume transformations, such as the relative strength index, moving averages, regressions, inter-market and intra-market price correlations, business cycles, stock market cycles or, classically, through recognition of chart patterns.
Technical analysis stands in contrast to the fundamental analysis approach to security and stock analysis. Technical analysis analyzes price, volume and other market information, whereas fundamental analysis looks at the facts of the company, market, currency or commodity. Most large brokerage, trading group, or financial institutions will typically have both a technical analysis and fundamental analysis team.
Technical analysis is widely used among traders and financial professionals and is very often used by active day traders, market makers and pit traders. In the 1960s and 1970s it was widely dismissed by academics. In a recent review, Irwin and Park[11] reported that 56 of 95 modern studies found that it produces positive results but noted that many of the positive results were rendered dubious by issues such as data snooping, so that the evidence in support of technical analysis was inconclusive; it is still considered by many academics to be pseudoscience.[12] Academics such as Eugene Fama say the evidence for technical analysis is sparse and is inconsistent with the weak form of the efficient-market hypothesis.[13][14] Users hold that even if technical analysis cannot predict the future, it helps to identify trading opportunities.[15]
In the foreign exchange markets, its use may be more widespread than fundamental analysis.[16][17] This does not mean technical analysis is more applicable to foreign markets, but that technical analysis is more recognized as to its efficacy there than elsewhere. While some isolated studies have indicated that technical trading rules might lead to consistent returns in the period prior to 1987,[18][19][20][21] most academic work has focused on the nature of the anomalous position of the foreign exchange market.[22] It is speculated that this anomaly is due to central bank intervention, which obviously technical analysis is not designed to predict.[23] Recent research suggests that combining various trading signals into a Combined Signal Approach may be able to increase profitability and reduce dependence on any single rule.[24]