Thanks for the information. I don't mind spending $200 for a piece of software but the free BigCharts chart also gives me exactly what AIMBroker generated.
I use other indicators to study their relationship with the price movements. From my learning and my experience I use MACD for confirmation of a trend, MACD is quite often late in generating sell signals, especially for hot stocks.
Life is fairly easy in using very basic chart reading skills in dealing with QQQQ. It's a big lesson for me and it's something that I should follow up more.
Again, thanks for sharing your ideas and experience
With BigCharts you can plot any indicator, I agree, but you cannot perform a back-test and that is where AMIBroker comes into play.
Using MACD to confirm a trend is a good idea, but code that into a system and then lets see how it worked over historical data. Did it really perform well? Only a test will show the facts.
MTRIG wrote:
HTML:With BigCharts you can plot any indicator, I agree, but you cannot perform a back-test and that is where AMIBroker comes into play. Using MACD to confirm a trend is a good idea, but code that into a system and then lets see how it worked over historical data. Did it really perform well? Only a test will show the facts.
I used the chart of DPTR from July 01 to Oct 02, 2009 to give an example that MACD is late in giving sell signal for hot stocks.
Please run a back test for the same period to see how AMIBroker program does the job.
The story of DPTR is that I was telling my friends that I did not feel comfortable to see the light trading volume
at that point, there might be a reversion around the corner, and sure enough Stochastic gave the signal the following day.
Please see how you can back test DPTR for this period by using AMIBroker.
songcon, I will run the back-test. It is not so much as how AMIBroker performed, but a mechanical system based on the criteria. Regarding your example what do you want to test? MACD Crossover for the life of stock? Stochastic BUY signal ....then if MACD fires 3 days after that GO LONG (reverse the rules for GO SHORT)? Let me know and I would be happy to run it.
Also, looking at the chart on your post there were many Stochastic and MACD crossovers back to back (LONG/SHORT) when the stock was in a trading range. This is typical in a trading range, what do you do to filter out those signals visually?