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<title>이병무 - Brian Lee &gt; Brian Lee - 모기지 &gt; Stock | Financial</title>
<link>http://www.bmlee.com/bbs/board.php?bo_table=stock_en</link>
<description>테스트 버전 0.2 (2004-04-26)</description>
<language>ko</language>
<item>
<title>Growth Investing Vs. Value Investing</title>
<link>http://www.bmlee.com/bbs/board.php?bo_table=stock_en&amp;wr_id=2</link>
<description><![CDATA[
<DIV><STRONG><U><FONT size=4>Growth Investing </FONT></U></STRONG></DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Growth investors look for companies that are sales and earnings machines. Such companies have a lot of potential, and growth investors are willing to pay handsomely for them. A growth company's potential might stem from a new product, a breakthrough patent, overseas expansion, or excellent management. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Key company measurements that growth investors examine are&nbsp;earnings and recent stock price strength. A growth company without strong earnings is like an Indy 500 race car without an engine. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Dividends aren't very important to growth investors because many growth companies pay small or no dividends. Instead, they reinvest profits to expand and improve their business future. Growing companies post bigger earnings each year and the amount of those earnings increases should be getting bigger, too. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Most growth investors set minimum criteria for investing in a company. Perhaps it should be growing at least 20 percent a year and pushing new highs in stock price. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Most new growth stocks trade on the NASDAQ. Growth companies you're probably familiar with are Microsoft, Intel, Starbucks, and Home Depot.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Growth Investors are searching for hot hands, not great bargains. They'll pay more for good companies. As a result, many growth investors don't even look at a stock's price in relation to its earnings or its book value because they know a lot of growth stocks are expensive and they don't care. They simply look at a stock's potential and go for it, hoping that current successes continue and get even better. They buy momentum, inertia, steamrolling forward movement. That's the naure of growth investing</FONT>. </DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><STRONG><U><FONT size=4>Value Investing</FONT></U></STRONG></DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Value investors look for stocks on the cheap. They compare stock prices to different measures of a company's business such as its earnings, assets, cash flow, and sales volume. The idea is that if you don't pay too much for what you get, there's less chance of losing money. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Value stocks have low prices compared to how much they earn and the worth of their assets. They are companies that have been overlooked on their journey to success, have fallen on hard times after more successful years, or are in a slump for any number of reasons. Hopefully, they're on a comeback, and the value investor want to buy companies with a bright future. The difference is that growth investors usually buy those companies when they're already steamrolling ahead to that bright future, while value investors usually buy those companies when they're still getting ready to start or are recovering from a tumble. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>The value investor is a bargain hunter extraordinaire. Value investing more closely resembles what we've been taught from the time we were kids. What did you look at when buying candy? Probably which kind you could get that most of for your pocketfull of allowance money. In school, you probably bought the package of notebook paper with the most sheets for your dollar. When relatives came by for the holidays they might have swapped stories of the great bargains or "steals" they purchased recently. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Value investors pay particular attention to dividends. A company that pays dividends contributes to an investor's profit even if the stock price does not rise. Also among big companies, the dividend yield is a great indicator of how bargain priced a company is. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><U><STRONG><FONT size=4>Combining Growth and Value</FONT></STRONG></U></DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Growth investing and value investing are not mutually exclusive. Many growth investors use some measure of value to time their purchase of growth stocks. Most value investors use some measure of growth potential to evaluate a troubled company's chances of recovery. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3>Growth investors tend to get in when things are heating up and bail out at the first sign of slowing growth. Value investors tend to be very careful about where their money goes and let it ride out fluctuations once they decide where to invest. Due to such contrasts, value investing is more suitable for the average individual investor. Most individuals do not have the time or resources to monitor split-second changes in their stocks to act accordingly. It seems that conducting thorough research periodically and letting the chosen stocks do their thing is the best approach for most individual investors. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV>]]></description>
<dc:creator>mikehong123</dc:creator>
<dc:date>Tue, 20 Feb 2007 14:52:27 -0700</dc:date>
</item>
<item>
<title>Stochastic Oscillator (Fast, Slow, and Full)</title>
<link>http://www.bmlee.com/bbs/board.php?bo_table=stock_en&amp;wr_id=1</link>
<description><![CDATA[
<H1>Stochastic Oscillator (Fast, Slow, and Full)</H1><!-- InstanceBeginEditable name="Content" --><BR>
<DIV class=print_link align=right><A href="javascript-x:window.print();"><IMG height=13 alt="" hspace=0 src="http://stockcharts.com/images/blue_print.gif" width=17 border=0>&nbsp;Print</A> </DIV>
<DIV class=clear>&nbsp;</DIV><A name=overview></A>
<H2>Introduction</H2>
<DIV>Developed by George C. Lane in the late 1950s, the Stochastic Oscillator is a momentum indicator that shows the location of the current close relative to the high/low range over a set number of periods. Closing levels that are consistently near the top of the range indicate accumulation (buying pressure) and those near the bottom of the range indicate distribution (selling pressure). </DIV><A name=formula></A>
<H2>Calculation </H2>
<DIV><IMG height=474 alt="Stochastic Oscillator formula and example table from StockCharts.com" hspace=0 src="http://stockcharts.com/education/indicatoranalysis/images/stoch-formula.gif" width=422 border=0></DIV>
<DIV>A 14-day %K (14-period Stochastic Oscillator) would use the most recent close, the highest high over the last 14 days and the lowest low over the last 14 days. The number of periods will vary according to the sensitivity and the type of signals desired. As with <A href="http://stockcharts.com/education/IndicatorAnalysis/indic_RSI.html">RSI</A>, 14 is a popular number of periods for calculation.</DIV>
<DIV>%K tells us that the close (115.38) was in the 57th percentile of the high/low range, or just above the mid-point. Because %K is a percentage or ratio, it will fluctuate between 0 and 100. A 3-day simple <A title="Glossary: moving average" href="http://stockcharts.com/education/GlossaryM.html#MovingAverage">moving average</A> of %K is usually plotted alongside to act as a signal or trigger line, called %D.</DIV><A name=slowvsfast></A>
<H2>Slow versus Fast versus Full </H2>
<DIV>There are three types of Stochastic Oscillators: Fast, Slow, and Full. The Full Stochastic is discussed later. For now, let's look at Fast versus Slow. As shown above, the Fast Stochastic Oscillator is made up of %K and %D. In order to avoid confusion between the two, I'll use %K (fast) and %D (fast) to refer to those used in the Fast Stochastic Oscillator, and %K (slow) and %D (slow) to refer to those used in the Slow Stochastic Oscillator. The driving force behind both Stochastic Oscillators is %K (fast), which is found using the formula provided above.</DIV>
<DIV><IMG height=500 alt="Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) Stochastic Oscillator example chart from StockCharts.com" hspace=0 src="http://stockcharts.com/education/indicatoranalysis/images/stochfastslow-cscoSS.gif" width=530 border=1> </DIV>
<DIV>In the CSCO example, the Fast Stochastic Oscillator is plotted in the box just below the price plot. The thick black line represents %K (fast) and the thin red line represents %D (fast). Also called the trigger line, %D (fast) is a smoothed version of %K (fast). One method of smoothing data is to apply a moving average. To smooth %K (fast) and create %D (fast), a 3-period simple moving average was applied to %K (fast). Notice how the %K (fast) line pierces the %D (fast) line a number of times during May, June and July. To alleviate some of these false breaks and smooth %K (fast), the Slow Stochastic Oscillator was developed.</DIV>
<DIV>The Slow Stochastic Oscillator is plotted in the lower box: the thick black line represents %K (slow) and the thin red line represents %D (slow). To find %K (slow) in the Slow Stochastic Oscillator, a 3-day SMA was applied to %K (fast). This 3-day SMA slowed (or smoothed) the data to form a slower version of %K (fast). A close examination would reveal that %D (Fast), the thin red line in the Fast Stochastic Oscillator, is identical to %K (Slow), the thick black line in the Slow Stochastic Oscillator. To form the trigger line, or %D (slow) in the Slow Stochastic Oscillator, a 3-day SMA was applied to %K (Slow).</DIV>
<DIV>The <STRONG>Full Stochastic Oscillator</STRONG> takes three parameters. Just as in the Fast and Slow versions, the first parameter is the number of periods used to create the initial %K line and the last parameter is the number of periods used to create the %D (full) signal line. What's new is the additional parameter, the one in the middle. It is a "smoothing factor" for the initial %K line. The %K (full) line that gets plotted is a n-period SMA of the initial %K line (where n is equal to the middle parameter).</DIV>
<DIV>The Full Stochastic Oscillator is more advanced and more flexible than it's Fast and Slow cousins. You can even use it to duplicate the other versions. For example, a (14, 3) Fast Stochastic is equivalent to a (14, 1, 3) Full Stochastic and a (12, 2) Slow Stochastic is equal to a (12, 3, 2) Full Stochastic.</DIV>
<H3>%K and %D Recap</H3>
<UL>
<LI>%K (fast) = %K formula presented above using x periods 
<LI>%D (fast) = y-day SMA of %K (fast) 
<LI>%K (slow) = 3-day SMA of %K (fast) 
<LI>%D (slow) = y-day SMA of %K (slow) 
<LI>%K (full) = y-day SMA of %K (fast) 
<LI>%D (full) = z-day SMA of %K (full) </LI></UL>
<DIV>where x is the first parameter, y is the second parameter and (in the case of Full stochastics), z is the third parameter. In the case of Fast and Slow Stochastics, x is typically 14 and y is usually set to 3.</DIV><A name=use></A>
<H2>Use</H2>
<DIV>Readings below 20 are considered oversold and readings above 80 are considered overbought. However, Lane did not believe that a reading above 80 was necessarily bearish or a reading below 20 bullish. A security can continue to rise after the Stochastic Oscillator has reached 80 and continue to fall after the Stochastic Oscillator has reached 20. Lane believed that some of the best signals occurred when the oscillator moved from overbought territory back below 80 and from oversold territory back above 20.</DIV>
<DIV>Buy and sell signals can also be given when %K crosses above or below %D. However, crossover signals are quite frequent and can result in a lot of <A title="Glossary: whipsaw" href="http://stockcharts.com/education/GlossaryW.html#Whipsaw">whipsaws</A>.</DIV>
<DIV>One of the most reliable signals is to wait for a <A title="Glossary: divergence" href="http://stockcharts.com/education/GlossaryD.html#Divergence">divergence</A> to develop from overbought or oversold levels. Once the oscillator reaches overbought levels, wait for a negative divergence to develop and then a cross below 80. This usually requires a double dip below 80 and the second dip results in the sell signal. For a buy signal, wait for a positive divergence to develop after the indicator moves below 20. This will usually require a trader to disregard the first break above 20. After the positive divergence forms, the second break above 20 confirms the divergence and a buy signal is given.</DIV><A name=example></A>
<H2>Example</H2>
<DIV><IMG height=595 alt="International Business Machines (IBM) Stochastic Oscillator example chart from StockCharts.com" hspace=0 src="http://stockcharts.com/education/indicatoranalysis/images/stochslow-ibmSS.gif" width=497 border=0></DIV>
<DIV>In the IBM example above, it is clear that acting solely on overbought and oversold crossovers can generate false signals. Using crossovers of %D (slow) by %K (slow) can result in some good signals, but there are still whipsaws. By looking for divergences and overbought/oversold crossovers together, the 14-day Slow Stochastic Oscillator can produce fewer yet more reliable signals. The Slow Stochastic Oscillator produced 2 solid signals in IBM between Aug-99 and Mar-99. In Nov-99, a buy signal was given when the indicator formed a positive divergence and moved above 20 for the second time. Note that the <A href="http://stockcharts.com/education/ChartAnalysis/doubleTop.html">double top</A> in Nov-Dec (gray circle) was not a negative divergence -- the stock continued higher after this formed. In Jan-00, a sell signal was given when a negative divergence formed and the indicator dipped below 80 for the second time. </DIV><A name=sharpchart></A>
<H2>Stochastic Oscillators and SharpCharts2</H2>
<DIV><IMG height=74 alt="SharpCharts2 application Stochastic example image from StockCharts.com" hspace=0 src="http://stockcharts.com/education/indicatoranalysis/images/stochasticstable.gif" width=363 border=0></DIV>
<DIV>In StockCharts.com's SharpCharts2 tool, the Slow Stochastic Oscillator uses %K (slow) and the Fast Stochastic Oscillator uses %K (fast). There are two options available for both fast or slow. The first box represents the number of periods used to calculate %K for each. The second box represents the number of periods used in the moving average to form %D. The defaults are 14 and 3. For the Slow Stochastic Oscillator, that would imply a 14-period %K (slow) with a 3-day SMA of %K (slow) to form %D (slow). The third box does not affect these charts.</DIV>
<DIV>The Full Stochastic uses three parameters: the period for %K (fast), the period for the SMA that smooths %K (fast), and the period of the SMA that forms %D (full). While the tool provides some excellent default values, I encourage you to test different variations to discover what fits with their particular investing style or what works with a particular security.</DIV>]]></description>
<dc:creator>평상심</dc:creator>
<dc:date>Fri, 02 Feb 2007 07:20:45 -0700</dc:date>
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