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Fundamental in the long term, technical in the short term.
1. inform 2. to analyze events and their implications 3. to persuade and influence decisions
hypothesis!!! it all goes back to the scientific method :) And before you make the hypothesis you make an observation- though the hypothesis is the first step (I was being technical)
Fundamental analysis refers to analyzing the company's products, its market share, its management, its strategy, its financial and other related information. Technical analysis only looks at the financial charts of the company's stock and not its underlying fundamentals.
There are many sites that give you technical and fundamental analysis on the forex markets.
The weak form of the efficient market hypothesis states that all past price information is already reflected in current stock prices. The semi-strong form includes all public information, and the strong form incorporates both public and private information. The key difference lies in the type of information considered in each form, with the strong form being the most restrictive as it includes all information, making it virtually impossible to profit consistently from trading.
Twisties is what I call them. I also call them smart. cfl's is another, more technical term.
High Frequency
embanking is advantageous in all aspects. But when technical difficulties happens it is the worse scenario. Managerial people are responsible for the tracking of accounts in those scenario.
Forex strategies are used to make a profit from trading currencies on the forex market. Mostly they are divided into 2 categories: strategies based on technical analysis and strategies based on fundamental analysis. Technical analysis involves trading charts while fundamental analysis is used by traders who want to base their trades on the events that happen in the global economy.
It may be for technical reasons: "Accident" has implications that "incident" does not, and the incident in question may not have been accidental.
Fundamental analysis is the art of looking at a company business history such as earnings, dividends, bisness sector, etc to try to predict the future direction of the company's stock. Technical analysis is looking at the chart of the company's stock and trying to predict the direction of future movement based on technical analysis without regard to the fundamentals or business of the company.