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CONTRACT VOLUME VERSUS TOTAL VOLUME

December 5, 2009 // Posted in loans (Tags: , , , , ) |  Comments Off

in futures markets, in which individual contracts specify standard delivery months. the volume of each contract is available, along with the total volume of the market; that is. the total volume of all individual contracts. Spread transactions are not included in volume. This information is officially posted one day late, but estimates are available for many markets during the day. Total volume of crude oil is estimated even, hour and released to online news services.
Individual contract volume is important to determine the delivery. month that is most active. Traders find that the best execution fills are most likely where there is greatest liquidity. Analysts, however, have a difficult time assessing volume trends because there is a natural increase in volume as a contract moves from second month out to the nearby and traders shift their positions to the closest delivery month; there is a corresponding decline in volume as the delivery date becomes close. Looking only at the volume of one delivery month is equivalent to ignoring seasonality in an agricultural market.
Each futures market has its unique pattern of volume for individual contracts. Some, such as the interest rates, shift abruptly on the last day of the month prior to delivery, because the exchange raises margins dramatically for all traders holding positions in the delivery month. Currencies are very different and tend to trade actively in the nearest month up to one or two days before that contract goes off the board. While volume increases slightly in the next deferred contract, anyone trading sizable positions will need to stay with the nearby contract to the end.
Other than for determining which contract to trade, and perhaps the size order that the market can absorb, an analysis of volume as discussed in this series of posts must use total volume, the aggregate of all contracts, to have a data series that does not suffer the patterns of increasing and decreasing participation based on the coming and going of individual delivery months. When traders roll from the nearby to the next deferred contract, the transactions are performed as a spread, and those trades are not included in the volume figures. Because positions are closed out in one contract and opened in another. there is no change in the open interest.
The stock market equivalent to using total volume would be to add the volume for all stocks in a similar group. This would help smooth over those periods when the volume of one stock is very low If the group is not highly correlated in price movement, the end result might be a volume series that has very little to do with the stock you are trading.

Individual Patterns

November 9, 2009 // Posted in Patterns (Tags: , , , , ) |  Comments Off

In addition to the broader patterns noted above, there are specific situations of short duration that have been noted by the chartist, including:
Gaps Spikes
Reversal days Thrust days
Cups and caps
Major and Minor Formations
Throughout the study of charting, it is important to remember that the same patterns will appear in short- as well as long-term charts. An upward trendline can be drawn across the bottom of a price move that only began last week; it can represent a sustained 3-year trend in the financial markets, or a 6-month move in coffee. In general, the longer the time interval, the more significant the formation. Contract highs and lows, well-defined trading ranges, trendlines using weekly charts, and head-and-shoulder formations are carefully watched by traders. Obscure patterns and new formations are not of interest to most chartists, and without the support of the traders, conclusions drawn from those formations have no substance. The basic charting course also includes interpretation of volume and open interest and a variety of rules for using the formations.