Thursday, March 25, 2010

TSX Volume Leaders

VOLUME LEADERS
Symbol Name Last Trade Change Volume Related Info
BBD-B.TO BOMBARDIER INC CLASS'B'S/VTG NP 6.05 3:26PM EST Up 0.26 (4.49%) 12,758,683 Reports, More
WTN.TO WESTERN COAL CORP 5.79 3:26PM EST Down 0.04 (0.69%) 11,158,339 Reports, More
OTXCT.TO N/A 99.96 3:26PM EST Down 0.29 (0.29%) 9,907,486 More
AC-B.TO AIR CANADA CL B VTG SHS NPV 2.21 3:24PM EST Up 0.20 (9.95%) 7,098,558 Reports, More
HNU.TO HORIZONS BETAPRO NYMEX 5.68 3:25PM EST Down 0.34 (5.65%) 6,827,289 More
CHD.TO CHARIOT RESOURCES COM NPV 0.65 2:59PM EST 0.00 (0.00%) 5,131,175 Reports, More
ELR.TO EASTERN PLATINUM COM NPV 1.39 3:24PM EST Up 0.02 (1.46%) 5,129,310 Reports, More
XIU.TO ISHARES CDN S&P/TSX 60 IDX F 17.81 3:25PM EST Up 0.08 (0.45%) 4,736,180 More
HND.TO HORIZONS BETAPRO NYMEX 8.82 3:22PM EST Up 0.46 (5.50%) 4,213,288 Reports, More
QC.TO QUEST CAPITAL CORP COM NPV 1.32 3:17PM EST Up 0.01 (0.76%) 4,158,533 Reports, More
CLL.TO CONNACHER OIL GAS COM NPV 1.43 3:21PM EST Up 0.11 (8.33%) 4,070,526 Reports, More
MFC.TO MANULIFE FINL CORP COM NPV 20.29 3:25PM EST Up 0.29 (1.45%) 4,047,704 Reports, More
TLM.TO TALISMAN ENERGY IN COM NPV 17.17 3:25PM EST Up 0.03 (0.18%) 3,773,313 Reports, More
PKL.TO PC GOLD INC 1.38 3:24PM EST Down 0.07 (4.83%) 3,739,946 Reports, More
YRI.TO YAMANA GOLD INC COM NPV 10.01 3:26PM EST Down 0.05 (0.50%) 3,615,124 Reports, More
HOU.TO HORIZONS NYMEX Crude Oil Bull P 9.00 3:25PM EST Up 0.04 (0.45%) 3,551,716 More
EFL.TO ELECTROVAYA INC COM NPV 1.78 3:26PM EST Down 0.29 (14.01%) 3,311,563 Reports, More
ABX.TO BARRICK GOLD CORP COM NPV 37.95 3:26PM EST Down 0.20 (0.52%) 3,068,432 Reports, More
ECA.TO ENCANA CORP 30.71 3:26PM EST Down 0.11 (0.36%) 3,061,344 Reports, More
FIU.TO FIRST URANIUM CORP COM NPV 1.30 3:26PM EST Down 0.06 (4.41%) 3,051,283 Reports, More
TRP.TO TRANSCANADA CORP COM NPV 37.77 3:26PM EST Up 0.63 (1.70%) 2,937,874 Reports, More
SWY.TO STORNOWAY DIAMOND COM NPV 0.64 3:20PM EST Down 0.05 (7.25%) 2,794,137 Reports, More
SU.TO Suncor Energy 31.13 3:26PM EST Down 0.07 (0.22%) 2,742,543 Reports, More
CEE.TO CENTAMIN EGYPT NPV 1.84 3:26PM EST Up 0.02 (1.10%) 2,733,966 More
G.TO GOLDCORP INC COM NPV 37.84 3:26PM EST Down 0.39 (1.02%) 2,624,773 Reports, More

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Charting the right online course

Charting the right online course


Jana Schilder

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Tyler Bollhorn, founder of Stockscores.com, says "traders crowd their stock charts with different indicators, hoping lines and colours will provide insight."

JANA SCHILDER PHOTO

If you're an online investor and are thinking about trying your hand at swing trading or position trading with stocks, a good place to start is with charting basics.

Stock charts provide a picture of the past trading activity of a stock. The vertical axis on the chart shows price; the horizontal axis shows time. When looking at a stock chart from left to right, you are seeing the price movement of a stock through time.

The field of technical analysis is highly complex and is a subspecialty in itself. If you crack open Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets by John Murphy, you'll learn about different types of charts that measure different things about stock markets.

At some point, you might get curious about: Bollinger bands, the Stochastic oscillator, Japanese candlestick charts, Moving Average Convergence/Difference (called MACD), the relative strength index (RSI), and the list goes on.

The quest? To find predictions, patterns, and probabilities in the behaviour of stock markets – which is behaviour of institutions and individual traders in the markets – that will make money for your investments in the future.

For those who are afflicted with analysis paralysis, the field of technical analysis can be a black hole from which they never emerge.

"Some traders crowd their stock charts with many different indicators, hoping that the lines and colours will provide them with added insight. Often, their charts end up looking like a basket weaving competition gone terribly wrong," says Kelowna-B.C.-based Tyler Bollhorn, 39, founder of Stockscores.com.

"Keep it simple. This is an approach that many stock traders forget," says Bollhorn, a self-taught 19-year veteran of online trading.

"I prefer to use `candlestick charts' because they provide more information about short-term supply and demand than a conventional line or bar chart," says Bollhorn.

Candlestick charts demonstrate the open, high, low, and close for the chart time period. The difference between the open and close makes up the fat, middle part of the candle, which is called the body. The areas above and below the body are the tails of the candle; they demonstrate the highs and lows for the time period the candle represents.

"At Stockscores.com, I differentiate between bullish and bearish candles, depending whether the stock closed above or below its open," says Bollhorn.

Bullish candles are those that close above their open; they are usually green. During a trading day, the stock will move up and down. The buyers are in control of the market when the candle has a close that is higher than the open, and is therefore optimistic.

Bearish candles are red, indicating that they closed below their open. The stock will close below its open and with pessimism when the sellers are in control.

"The approach I teach online trading students is that `message candles' have noticeably taller bodies than those before them. The price volatility over the period that the candle represents is high, indicating a strong opinion by either buyers or sellers," says Bollhorn. "If the candle is green, the buyers are giving a message of strength. If red, the sellers are expressing pessimism," says Bollhorn.

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