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Support
and Resistence
Think of prices for financial
instruments as a result of a head-to-head battle between
a bull (the buyer) and a bear (the seller). Bulls
push prices higher, and bears lower them. The direction
prices actually move shows who wins the battle.

Support is a level at which bulls (i.e., buyers) take
control over the prices and prevent them from falling
lower.
Resistance, on the other
hand, is the point at which sellers (bears) take control
of prices and prevent them from rising higher. The
price at which a trade takes place is the price at
which a bull and bear agree to do business. It represents
the consensus of their expectations.
Support levels indicate
the price where the most of investors believe that
prices will move higher. Resistance levels indicate
the price at which the most of investors feel prices
will move lower.
But investor expectations
change with the time, and they often do so abruptly.
The development of support and resistance levels is
probably the most noticeable and reoccurring event
on price charts. The breaking through support/resistance
levels can be triggered by fundamental changes that
are above or below investor's expectations (e.g.,
changes in earnings, management, competition, etc.)
or by self-fulfilling prophecy (investors buy as they
see prices rise). The cause is not so significant
as the effect: new expectations lead to new price
levels. There are support/resistance levels, which
are more emotional.
Supply and demand
There is nothing mysterious about support and resistance:
it is classic supply and demand. Remembering Econ
101 class, supply/demand lines show what the
supply and demand will be at a given price.
The supply line shows the
quantity (i.e., the number of shares) that sellers
are willing to supply at a given price. When prices
increase, the quantity of sellers also increases as
more investors are willing to sell at these higher
prices. The demand line shows the number of shares
that buyers are willing to buy at a given price. When
prices increase, the quantity of buyers decreases
as fewer investors are willing to buy at higher prices.
At any given price, a supply/demand
chart shows how many buyers and sellers there are.
In a free market, these lines are continually changing.
Investor's expectations change, and so do the prices
buyers and sellers feel are acceptable. A breakout
above a resistance level is evidence of an upward
shift in the demand line as more buyers become willing
to buy at higher prices. Similarly, the failure of
a support level shows that the supply line has shifted
downward.
The foundation of most
technical analysis tools is rooted in the concept
of supply and demand. Charts of prices for financial
instruments give us a superb view of these forces
in action.
Traders remorse
After a support/resistance level has been broken through,
it is common for traders to ask temselves about to
what extent new prices represent the facts. For example,
after a breakout above a resistance level, buyers
and sellers may both question the validity of the
new price and may decide to sell. This creates a phenomenon
that is referred to as "traders remorse":
prices return to a support/resistance level following
a price breakout.
The price action following
this remorseful period is crucial. One of two things
can happen: either the consensus of expectations will
be that the new price is not warranted, in which case
prices will move back to their previous level; or
investors will accept the new price, in which case
prices will continue to move in the direction of the
breaking through.
In case number one, following
traders remorse, the consensus of expectations
is that a new higher price is not warranted, a classic
"bull trap" (or false breakout) is created.
For example, the prices broke through a certain resistance
level (luring in a herd of bulls who expected prices
to move higher), and then prices dropped back to below
the resistance level leaving the bulls holding overpriced
stock. Similar sentiment creates a bear trap. Prices
drop below a support level long enough to get the
bears to sell (or sell short) and then bounce back
above the support level leaving the bears out of the
market.
The other thing that can
happen following traders remorse is that investors
expectations may change causing the new price to be
accepted. In this case, prices will continue to move
in the direction of the penetration.
A good way to quantify
expectations following a breakout is with the volume
associated with the price breakout. If prices break
through the support/resistance level with a large
increase in volume and the traders remorse period
is on relatively low volume, it implies that the new
expectations will rule (a minority of investors are
remorseful). Conversely, if the breakout is on moderate
volume and the "remorseful" period is on
increased volume, it implies that very few investor
expectations have changed and a return to the original
expectations (i.e., original prices) is warranted.
Resistance becomes support
When a resistance level is successfully broken through,
that level becomes a support level. Similarly, when
a support level is successfully broken through, that
level becomes a resistance level.
The reason for it is that
a new "generation" of bulls appears, who
refused to buy when prices were low. Now they are
anxious to buy at any time the prices return to the
previous level. Similarly, when prices drop below
a support level, that level often becomes a resistance
level that prices have a difficult time breaking through.
When prices approach the previous support level, investors
seek to limit their losses by selling.
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