The Fisher Transform is a technical indicator that normalizes asset prices, thereby making price pivot points clearer.
Some traders look for extreme values to signal potential price reversal areas, while others watch for a change in the direction of the Fisher Transform.
The Fisher Transform formula is usually applied to price, but it can be applied to other indicators as well.
Asset prices do not have a normal distribution, so attempts to normalize prices using an indicator may not always give reliable signals.
The Accumulation/Distribution Line (A/D) measures the supply and demand of an asset or security by looking at where price closed in a period range and then multiplying that by volume.
A bull trap means a reversal that forces market participants who are on the wrong side of the price movement to close positions with unexpected losses.
A bullish engulfing pattern is a candlestick pattern that forms when a small black candlestick the next day is followed by a large white candlestick whose body completely overlaps or engulfs the body of the previous day’s candlestick.
Capitulation occurs when a significant proportion of investors give in to fear and sell within a short period of time, resulting in a sharp drop in the price of a security or market against a backdrop of high trading volume.
Consolidation is a technical analysis term used to describe the price movement of a stock within a given range of support and resistance over a period of time.
The Directional Movement Index (DMI) is a technical indicator that measures both the strength and direction of price movement and is designed to reduce false signals.