December 2006
Trading Tip: Predictive Average
by Howard Arrington
This Predictive Average is a clever method for removing some of the lag inherent
with moving averages. The principle involved is to use the spread between
two moving averages as an offset from the original moving
average. In this example, the original moving average is the
Blue line. The spread distance between the Blue line and a 2nd
moving average (Red line) is added to the Blue line to create the
Predictive Average which is drawn in Pink. 

Formula: ave1=xaverage(price,period);
ave2=xaverage(ave1,period);
spread=(ave1-ave2);
zlag=(ave1+spread); DYO Implementation:
Line A will be your price selection. Example uses the bar closes, but
could be changed to be a bar's High or Low. Line B is the Exponential average of the data on Line A. Line C is
the average of the data on Line B. This is the calculation for ave1 and
ave2. The 1st average is stored in GV[1]. The 2nd average is
stored in GV[2]. GV is our notation for a global variable of which there are 255
variables. Line D calculates the spread between the two averages
by subtracting GV[2] from GV[1].
Line D reads GV[1] for Value and subtracts the Number field which is the
contents of GV[2]. This result is written in GV[3] and is the spread
value. Line E reads the average from GV[1], adds the contents of GV[3] which was
written by Line D, and plots the sum as a Pink line. This is the zlag
expression.
This example can be downloaded from the Ensign web site using the Internet
Services form. The template for the example is named: 1391-PredictiveAve
Template: 1391-PredictiveAve
Trading Tip:Anticipating Moving Average Crossovers
by Howard Arrington
A significant feature in Ensign Windows is the PriceFinder(TM) technology
that can be used with any study. PriceFinder is a selection in the Design Your Own(TM) study feature. It can be used to solve for
tomorrow's close and plot the price that would cause two moving
averages to cross.

Figure A - Ensign Windows PriceFinder. The blue line is a 20-day
moving average, and the red line is a 30-day moving average. The green line
was calculated using Ensign's PriceFinder. This curve shows the price
which would cause two moving averages to cross. As the two averages get near
each other, the green line approaches the averages. The advantage and power of PriceFinder, is that it can
be used with any study. Go to the www.ensignsoftware.com
web site for additional examples of PriceFinder being used with
Bollinger Bands, Commodity Channel Index, and Relative Strength Index.
The creation of the crossover price curve required 2 lines in Ensign's
Design Your Own study, as shown below.

Figure B - Design Your Own parameters that implement tomorrow's close
(TC) curve.
The Line A selection is a Boolean flag for the Moving Average lines, and
will have a True value when the 1st line (20-bar average) is above the 2nd
line (30-bar average). Line B uses the PriceFinder technology to
calculate the next bar's close that would cause the Boolean Flag from Line A
to change states. This price is plotted using a green curve line.
The following chart is the same chart shown in Figure A. The scale has
been changed to show more clearly the relationship of the bars, the 2 moving
average lines, and the price curve that causes the 2 moving average
lines to cross.

Figure C - Next bar's closing price that causes the 2 moving averages to
cross.
When the blue line (20-bar average) is below the red line (30-bar average),
a higher price is needed to raise the blue line to cross the red line.
The green line is showing the price for tomorrow that is needed to
cause the 2 moving averages to cross. Once the blue line is
above the red line, the next bar's price (green line) price would
naturally be below the two averages. A lower price is needed to
cause the blue line to descend to cross the red line. Formulas for
calculating the price that would cause 2 moving averages to cross are
published in the February 2007 issue of Stocks and Commodities in the
article 'Anticipating Moving Average Crossovers' by Dimitris Tsokakis.
Trading Tip:$TICK and $TICKI Divergence
by Howard Arrington
Ensign has a tool for showing Divergence between a study or overlay and
the host chart. In this example $TICK and $TICKI are added to the ES
#F e-mini chart as overlays. The Divergence study is marking
divergence formations between the overlays and the ES #F chart.
Rarely will $TICK and $TICKI have
divergence on the same bar. You can study the example and decide what
action you might want to take when divergence is present. One
drawback to factor in is that the Flag for the Divergence on either overlay will be 2 bars after the
Divergence occurred.
This example can be downloaded as a template from the Ensign web site
using the Internet Services form. The template is
named: 1398-TickDiverge. In the template's
content note the use of a DYO to select the High or the Low of the overlay for use
in the Divergence calculation, so the divergence lines are drawn from the
Highs and/or Lows on the overlays.
Template: 1398-TickDiverge
Trading Tip:CCI Zero Line Pullback
by Howard Arrington
What is a pullback? And how
could it be found using the Commodity Channel Index (CCI)? Pullback usually is referring to a retracement
wave in a trend. With a CCI study, the price pullback causes the
CCI line to head towards the zero line, and typically reverse at the zero line
about the time the retracement is complete. Patrons of CCI
call this a 'zero line bounce'.
The first 2 arrows show pullbacks in a down
trend, where the CCI returned to the zero line and then the down trend
continued. The last 3 arrows show pullbacks in an up
trend, where the CCI returned to the zero line and then the up trend
continued.
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