In 1887 Charles Dow (as in 'The Dow Jones') developed two stock market 'averages':
In 1900 he wrote a series of articles noting that the direction of prices in each average appeared to be based on a set of rules. Collectively, these became known as The Dow Theory and the key precepts are summarised below.
Dow Theory
This means that all the positives and all the negatives about a company are assumed to be known by the market and built into the share price. Implicitly, no stocks are undervalued, because the market has 'perfect' knowledge.
Rallies in the market are accompanied by increasing volume, and falls with decreasing volume.
If a primary trend is confirmed by the movement of both averages it will continue until there is a definite reversal signal. So once a primary trend has started the chances are it will continue, but once it has been around for a while the chances of continuation are less.
If you are new to technical analysis, don't feel that you have to fully understand the five precepts above. The point at this stage is to get a feel for the way technical analysts think about the stock market, with prices moving in cycles and being determined by a set of rules.
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