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Differnt Kinds Of Charts In Forex Trading

Forex trading used to be a very simple exercise. You simply bought a commodity or a currency at a certain price and then sold it at a higher price to make a profit. As analysis techniques developed for forex trading, though, greater value was given not just to making that profit but also to understanding the trends in the market. With all the line graphs, bar and candlestick charts and the like to look at, that's not a very simple thing to do.

 

Much of the analysis based on forex trading information is steeped in mathematics and numbers. It thus makes sense that statistics - one of the applications of mathematics - should be used in putting order into what'd otherwise be a crazy jumble of numbers.

What is it about those techniques that make them work? It's rather straightforward when you think about it. Although the prices of currencies on any forex market constantly changes, there's always a trend to the changes that occur. The trends themselves tend to look very different and confusing, but they do cycle in the long run. History repeats, it seems, not only in the history books but in forex trading prices as well.

Knowing that the forex trading trends have a natural tendency to repeat over time, analysts and experts have devised certain indicators called signals that tell you when a certain event is about to happen. Using these signals, however, is heavily dependent on your understanding some of the more common analyses like line graphs and bar and candlestick charts.

Less is more, the adage goes, and line graphs certainly go well with that ideal. They're one of the simplest devices used to plot and visually analyze forex pricing trends. With nothing but a line that goes up or down as it goes forward, you really can't go much simpler than line graphs. Bar and candlestick charts, on the other hand, are a little more sophisticated.

Bar charts are very similar to line graphs, but they're more useful in certain cases than in others. Bar charts are often used to represent the price or the changes for particular currencies within a given span of time. Color and the two dimensions are typically used to give the chart better depth and more information.

At first glance, candlestick charts look identical to bar charts. Their functions and usage, however, are very different. While bar charts are best used to compare values and thus see relationships for several different factors, candlestick charts show more information better for fewer variables. Unlike bar charts, candlestick charts usually show more than one value per bar or 'candlestick.'

It might seem that the differences between line graphs, bar and candlestick charts are negligible. Each one, though, is best suited to a situation depending on the type of factors and variables being considered. For example, line graphs are most efficiently used when looking for the highs and lows of just one or two factors. It's not enough to just know how to read them; you have to know when and why to use each one as well.



 

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