Tick-by-tick day trading Simulation Software for currencies, futures and stocks
Download the RapidSP daytrading simulator and explore your chances of succeeding at the super-career as a daytrader. Learn to day trade currencies, futures, and stocks at a speed of your choice. Download years of tick data for many instruments for free, 100+ technical studies, oscillators, line studies & price styles.
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Technical Stuies offered in RapidSP

Top Studies

Bollinger Bands

Darvas Boxes

Exponential Moving Average


Fractal Chaos Bands


High/Low Bands


Median Price


Moving Average Envelope


Simple Moving Average


Time Series Moving Average


Triangular Moving Average


Variable Moving Average


VIDYA Moving Average


Weighted Moving Average


Parabolic SAR


Weighted Close


Prime Number Bands


Welles Wilder Smoothing


Bottom Studies


Williams %R

Williams Accumulation Distribution


Vertical Horizontal Filter


Ultimate Oscillator


True Range

TRIX


Rainbow Oscillator


Price Oscillator


Momentum Oscillator


MACD

Directional Movement System


Detrended Price Oscillator


Chande Momentum Oscillator


Chaikin Volatility


Aroon


Aroon Oscillator


Linear Regression R-Squared


Linear Regression Forecast


Linear Regression Slope


Linear Regression Intercept


Performance Index


Commodity Channel Index

Typical Price


Standard Deviation


Price ROC


High Minus Low


Swing Index


Accumulative Swing Index


Comparative RSI


Mass Index


Relative Strength Index


Stochastic Oscillator


Stochastic Momentum Index


Fractal Chaos Oscillator


Prime Number Oscillator


Volume Studies

Volume Oscillator

Ease Of Movement


Price Volume Trend


Chaikin Money Flow


Volume ROC


Money Flow Index


Negative Volume Index


On Balance Volume


Positive Volume Index


Trade Volume Index


Line Studies


Gann Fan

Speed Lines


Fibonacci Arcs


Fibonacci Fans


Fibonacci Retracements


Fibonacci Time Zones


Tirone Levels


Quadrant Lines

Raff Regression


Error Channels


Price Styles


Point And Figure

Renko


Kagi


Three Line Break


Equivolume


Equivolume Shadow


Candle Volume


OHLC Bar


Candle Stick


Kagi 
 



Kagi charts display a series of connecting vertical lines where the thickness and direction of the lines are dependent on the price action. The charts ignore the passage of time. Kagi charts have no time axis and are made up of a series of vertical lines, however in the case of kagi charts, the vertical lines are based solely on the action of closing prices. Another difference is that the thickness of a kagi chart line changes when closing prices penetrate the previous column top or bottom

If prices continue to move in the same direction, the vertical line is extended. However, if prices reverse by a reversal amount, a new kagi line is then drawn in a new column. When prices penetrate a previous high or low, the thickness of the kagi line changes. Kagi charts illustrate the forces of supply and demand on a instrument. A series of thick lines shows that demand is exceeding supply (a rally). A series of thin lines shows that supply is exceeding demand (a decline). Alternating thick and thin lines shows that the market is in a state of equilibrium (i.e., supply equals demand).

Usage

Kagi charts are an excellent way of viewing the underlying supply and demand of a market. When the most recent kagi line is thick (and green), it indicates that demand is exceeding supply, and that the market is in an upward trend. Thin (red) lines, on the other hand, show that supply is exceeding demand and that the market is in a downward trend. Alternating thick and thin lines indicate that supply and demand is in an approximate state of balance.

Kagi charts take the 'noise' out of the market, giving you a chart of the market's overall moves. You can gauge the strength of a trend by noting whether or not, in an upward trending market, a swing bottom is above, equal to, or below the previous swing top. The more 'above' it is, the stronger the trend. Normal technical analysis techniques can be used very effectively.

Kagi charts are of great value to a trader of trending markets. Traders can use kagi charts for their entry and exit signals, and to place their stop-loss orders to lock in profits. They would consider buying an instrument when the line changes from thin to thick. They would consider selling the instrument when the line changes from thick to thin.

More experienced traders can use a smaller reversal percentage when entering a trade, then when the trade is in profit, change this to a larger percentage. Should the instrument commence an almost vertical climb, called a blow-off top, a smaller reversal percentage can be used to help lock in profits. As a general rule, when a kagi chart has made eight to ten higher highs, the market is considered to be due for a correction.

Copyright 2007. Brenexa Corp. P.O. Box 6162, CA 95150-6162, U.S.A.