Price Trends, Momentum and Volumes of a Stock , How to measure them?
Contents
- 1 1. What is Price Trend?
- 2 ๐ 2. What is Momentum?
- 3 ๐ 3. What is Volume?
- 4 ๐ Summary Table:
- 5 ๐ Real Example:
- 6 What is a Moving Average?
- 7 ๐ Common Time Frames
- 8 โ Simple Example of a 5-Day SMA
- 9 ๐ How to Use Moving Averages in Investing
- 10 ๐ Chart Example (Text Version)
- 11 ๐ง Key Takeaways:
- 12 What are Trendlines in Stock Analysis?
- 13 ๐ Why Use Trendlines?
- 14 ๐ Two Main Types of Trendlines:
- 15 โ๏ธ How to Draw a Trendline?
- 16 ๐ ๏ธ How Are Trendlines Used in Trading?
- 17 ๐ Text-Based Chart Example (Uptrend Line)
- 18 ๐ง Final Thoughts on Trendlines:
1. What is Price Trend?
๐ In Simple Terms:
A price trend tells you which direction a stock price is moving over time.
๐ There are 3 main types:
- Uptrend: Price keeps going up (๐)
- Downtrend: Price keeps falling (๐)
- Sideways: Price moves up and down, but stays in a range (โก๏ธ)
๐ฏ How to Spot a Trend:
Imagine you’re watching the price of a stock:
| Day | Price |
|---|---|
| Monday | โน100 |
| Tuesday | โน104 |
| Wednesday | โน108 |
| Thursday | โน112 |
| Friday | โน116 |
โ
If the price keeps going up like this โ Uptrend
โ If it keeps falling โ Downtrend
๐ If it’s stuck around the same level โ Sideways trend
๐ Tools to Measure Price Trend:
- Moving Averages (MA):
- Shows the average price over a number of days.
- Example: 50-day Moving Average = average price over last 50 days.
- If current price is above moving average โ Uptrend
- If below โ Downtrend
- Trendlines:
- Draw a straight line connecting the low points in an uptrend, or the high points in a downtrend, on a price chart.
๐ 2. What is Momentum?
๐ In Simple Terms:
Momentum means how fast and strongly a stock price is moving in one direction.
Think of it like throwing a ball:
- A ball thrown hard (strong momentum) goes far.
- A weak throw (weak momentum) doesnโt go far.
Same with stocksโmomentum tells you if the stock has strength behind its move.
๐ How to Measure Momentum:
- RSI (Relative Strength Index):
- A number between 0 and 100
- RSI > 70 = Overbought (may fall soon)
- RSI < 30 = Oversold (may rise soon)
- MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence):
- Compares two moving averages.
- When short-term average crosses above long-term โ buy signal
- When it crosses below โ sell signal
- Rate of Change (ROC):
- Measures how much the price has changed in a certain period.
๐ฏ In Real Life:
If a stock goes from โน100 โ โน120 in a week, that’s strong momentum.
If another stock goes from โน100 โ โน102 in a week, thatโs weak momentum.
๐ 3. What is Volume?
๐ In Simple Terms:
Volume is the number of shares bought and sold in a day.
Think of it like foot traffic in a shop:
- More customers (high volume) = more interest
- Fewer customers (low volume) = low interest
๐ Why Volume Matters:
- When prices go up with high volume, it means many people believe in the move โ strong move
- When prices go up with low volume, it may be temporary or weak
๐ How to Use Volume:
- Check the “Volume” column on any stock chart or screener.
- Use Volume Moving Average to see if todayโs volume is higher or lower than normal.
๐ Summary Table:
| Term | Simple Meaning | What it Tells You | How to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price Trend | Direction of price | If stock is rising/falling | Use moving averages, draw trendlines |
| Momentum | Speed of price move | If stock has strength | Use RSI, MACD, ROC |
| Volume | Number of shares traded | How much interest people have | Compare today’s volume to average |
๐ Real Example:
Letโs say you are checking Tata Motors stock:
- Current price: โน950
- 50-day MA: โน880 โ So, it’s in an uptrend
- RSI: 75 โ Stock is overbought, momentum is high, but it may slow down soon
- Volume: Much higher than average โ Strong interest from traders
๐ Conclusion: The stock is trending up with strong momentum and volume, but it may be overbought in the short term.
Would you like a chart example or a free tool or Excel sheet to help you check these things on any stock?
Hereโs a simple chart example to help you visualize price trends, momentum (RSI), and volume โ just like you’d see on a stock trading platform (like Zerodha, TradingView, or MoneyControl).
๐ Example: Stock Chart of “ABC Ltd.”
Letโs imagine this is how ABC Ltd.’s stock performed over 10 days.
๐งพ Price + Moving Average (Trend) + Volume + RSI (Momentum)
| Day | Price (โน) | 5-Day Moving Avg (MA) | Volume (Shares) | RSI (0-100) | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 100 | โ | 5,000 | 35 | โ Start |
| 2 | 102 | โ | 6,000 | 45 | โ |
| 3 | 105 | โ | 6,500 | 55 | โ |
| 4 | 108 | โ | 7,000 | 65 | โ |
| 5 | 110 | 105.0 | 7,500 | 70 | ๐ Uptrend |
| 6 | 112 | 107.4 | 8,000 | 75 | ๐ Strong |
| 7 | 114 | 109.8 | 10,000 | 80 | โ ๏ธ Overbought |
| 8 | 113 | 111.8 | 7,000 | 78 | ๐ Cooling |
| 9 | 111 | 112.0 | 5,500 | 72 | ๐ Weakening |
| 10 | 109 | 111.8 | 4,000 | 65 | ๐ Downturn? |
๐ How to Read This:
๐ Price Trend (Moving Average):
- From Day 1 to Day 7, price keeps going up โ clear uptrend
- After Day 7, price dips below its moving average โ trend may be reversing
โก Momentum (RSI):
- RSI rises from 35 โ 80 by Day 7 โ strong buying momentum
- RSI > 70 = overbought, maybe time to book profits or avoid fresh buy
- RSI starts falling โ momentum slowing down
๐ Volume:
- Volume rises with price (Day 1 to Day 7) โ strong move supported by public interest
- After Day 7, volume drops โ less confidence in upward move
๐ Final Takeaway:
- โ From Day 1 to Day 7: Strong price trend, rising volume, strong momentum = good buying phase
- โ ๏ธ After Day 7: Price flattens, volume drops, RSI falls = warning signs, not the best time to enter.
What is a Moving Average?
๐ In Simple Terms:
A Moving Average (MA) is the average price of a stock over a certain number of days. It smooths out short-term ups and downs so you can see the actual trend.
๐ Why Use It?
- Helps you know if the stock is in an uptrend or downtrend.
- Makes decision-making easier by reducing noise.
- Often used for buy/sell signals.
๐ Types of Moving Averages:
| Type | Full Form | In Layman Terms |
|---|---|---|
| SMA | Simple Moving Average | Plain average of closing prices over a period |
| EMA | Exponential Moving Average | Gives more weight to recent prices (reacts faster to change) |
๐ Common Time Frames
| Time Frame | Used For |
|---|---|
| 10-day or 20-day MA | Short-term trend |
| 50-day MA | Medium-term trend |
| 200-day MA | Long-term trend |
โ Simple Example of a 5-Day SMA
Imagine a stock has these 5-day closing prices:
- Day 1: โน100
- Day 2: โน102
- Day 3: โน104
- Day 4: โน106
- Day 5: โน108
๐ 5-Day SMA =
(100 + 102 + 104 + 106 + 108) รท 5 = โน104
So, on Day 5, the 5-day SMA is โน104.
On Day 6, you drop Day 1 and add Day 6’s price.
๐ How to Use Moving Averages in Investing
1. ๐ Trend Direction
- If the stock price is above the MA, it’s in an uptrend.
- If itโs below the MA, itโs a downtrend.
2. ๐ก Buy/Sell Signals
- Golden Cross: When 50-day MA crosses above 200-day MA โ Buy Signal
- Death Cross: When 50-day MA crosses below 200-day MA โ Sell Signal
๐ Chart Example (Text Version)
Let’s look at a simple chart showing stock price vs. moving averages:
| Day | Price (โน) | 5-Day MA | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 100 | โ | โ |
| 2 | 101 | โ | โ |
| 3 | 102 | โ | โ |
| 4 | 104 | โ | โ |
| 5 | 106 | 102.6 | ๐ Price > MA |
| 6 | 107 | 104 | ๐ |
| 7 | 109 | 105.6 | ๐ |
| 8 | 108 | 106.8 | ๐ |
| 9 | 105 | 107 | โ ๏ธ Price < MA |
| 10 | 103 | 106.4 | ๐ Downtrend starting |
So on Day 9โ10, price falls below the MA, warning that the uptrend may be reversing.
๐ง Key Takeaways:
| Signal | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Price above MA | Bullish (Buyers in control) |
| Price below MA | Bearish (Sellers in control) |
| Short MA crosses long MA upward | Golden Cross โ Strong Buy Signal |
| Short MA crosses long MA downward | Death Cross โ Strong Sell Signal |
What are Trendlines in Stock Analysis?
๐ In Layman’s Terms:
A trendline is a straight line you draw on a stock chart to see the direction of the priceโwhether itโs going up, down, or sideways.
Think of it like:
โ๏ธ Drawing a line along the lows or highs of stock prices to visualize where the stock is heading.
๐ Why Use Trendlines?
- To identify the trend: Uptrend, Downtrend, or Sideways
- To find support and resistance levels
- To plan when to buy or sell
๐ Two Main Types of Trendlines:
| Trendline | Drawn Along | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Uptrend Line | Connects higher lows | Buyers are in control (๐ rising stock) |
| Downtrend Line | Connects lower highs | Sellers are in control (๐ falling stock) |
โ๏ธ How to Draw a Trendline?
Example: Drawing an Uptrend Line
Letโs say a stock moves like this:
| Day | Price (โน) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 100 |
| 2 | 104 |
| 3 | 102 |
| 4 | 106 |
| 5 | 108 |
| 6 | 107 |
| 7 | 110 |
- You take the low points (โน100, โน102, โน106, โน107) and draw a line connecting them going upward.
โ This shows the stock is making higher lows โ itโs in an uptrend.
Example: Drawing a Downtrend Line
| Day | Price (โน) |
|---|---|
| 1 | 150 |
| 2 | 145 |
| 3 | 142 |
| 4 | 139 |
| 5 | 135 |
| 6 | 130 |
- Connect the high points that keep getting lower (โน150, โน145, โน142…) โ this is a downtrend line.
โ Shows lower highs โ stock is in a downtrend.
๐ ๏ธ How Are Trendlines Used in Trading?
| Use | Example |
|---|---|
| ๐น Buy Signal | When price touches the uptrend line (support) and bounces up |
| ๐ธ Sell Signal | When price touches the downtrend line (resistance) and drops again |
| ๐ Breakout Signal | If price breaks above a downtrend line, it might start going up fast |
๐ Text-Based Chart Example (Uptrend Line)
markdownCopyEditPrice Chart:
Day: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Price:100 104 102 106 108 107 110
*
* *
* * *
\_________________ โ Uptrend Line (support)
- You can see that every time the price falls a bit, it lands on the trendline and goes up again โ buyers are stepping in.
๐ง Final Thoughts on Trendlines:
- Trendlines are visual tools that help you understand where the stock is going.
- They are not 100% accurate, but very useful with other indicators like volume, RSI, or moving averages.
- Traders use them to make smarter entry and exit decisions.
