Introduction to Indicators
"Learn the basics of indicators, their types, and how they help analyze trends and make smarter decisions. A complete beginner’s guide to understanding indicators."
Wikilix Team
Educational Content Team
13 min
Reading time
Beginner
Difficulty
Consider navigating a new city without a map. You will feel lost, unsure, and possibly frustrated. Indicators function just like a map; they help you make meaning out of complex data or stimuli, they help to orient you while traveling new territory, and they provide you with clues about what lies ahead.
Whether you are trying to understand the economy, make business decisions, or understand market behaviors, indicators serve as the tools that give you clear guidance and confidence in your personal journey.
Indicators are measurable signals or data points that help us consider performance, trends, and patterns. Indicators are found in many fields, but usually fall into one of two types:
Economic indicators: What is the economy's health? One may look at GDP, inflation rate, employment level, and consumer expenditure when looking at the economy.
Technical indicators: Found mainly in financial markets, technical indicators focus on price, volume, and/or a statistical model that provides indications that support a trend and predict future movements.
Not all indicators move in the same way. In terms of timing, there are three key types of indicators:
Leading indicators: move ahead of economic changes, allowing for predictions of scenarios. An increase in new housing permits could indicate some growth in the economy.
Lagging indicators: confirm an outcome. An example of a lagging indicator is the unemployment rate, which lags months after the economy has changed positively.• Coincident indicators: These indicators move with the current conditions of the economy, providing a snapshot of what is happening relative to price action.
Technical indicators provide traders and investors with a deeper insight into price action and/or market behavior. They typically reside in four different categories:
Trend indicators; indicators provide context around the overall direction. Moving averages give you an idea of the overall direction of the market and tell you if it's moving up, down, or sideways.
Momentum indicators tell you the strength of price action. For instance, if a stock's price is moving quickly, there is a momentum indicator that tells you whether it is getting overbought or oversold.
Volume indicators; these indicators serve as a tracking mechanism for the number of shares or contracts traded. Volume shows you the level of interest or involvement behind the price move.
Volatility indicators; These raise awareness of the level of price fluctuations over time, in other words, measure the potential risk. For instance, Bollinger Bands are a volatility indicator.
No indicator is absolute; therefore, using only one indicator won't provide an overall story. You will find that leading indicators will help to identify possible early direction or warning; however, they may also signal possible false signals.
Lagging indicators will help confirm a directional trend, but will take time to give you an idea of whether you have found a trend worth following. Technical indicators can all yield a robust response to price action; however, the price action may send contradictory signals.
Another simple yet effective approach is to utilize multiple indicators. For instance, combining indicators that show trends with momentum and volume tools can create a more comprehensive picture, making it harder to get it wrong.
Economic Example:
Think about tracking the housing market. If the new housing starts show a significant increase, this leading indicator may mean economic expansion is coming. Then a few months later, the lagging indicator data starts dropping, confirming that economic growth is taking shape. Meanwhile, GDP numbers serve as a coincident indicator, providing a real-time read on financial performance.
Technical Example:
On a stock chart, if prices are trending up, the trend is confirmed by moving averages (trend indicator). Additionally, the stock has a relative strength index that is currently at an overbought or near-overbought range (momentum indicator), and a significant uptick in trading volume (where is the supply?) as confirmation of the strength of the price move.
Then we start to see the volatility bands widening, from 2 trades that week to our whole watchlist of signals we have almost triggered. This widening is also a risk indicator, as buying stocks in an increasing volatility band carries additional caution.
The indicators you choose to use will depend on your intended purpose:
Economic Analysis: If you are showing leading indicators to project an upcoming trend, then you should also follow with its lagging indicators to confirm the trend or its coincident indicators to show back the current state of development.
Trading and Investment: If you are looking to find opportunities, then you might think of combining trend-following tools with momentum indicators and volume analysis, overcoming risk and managing trades accordingly.
Indicators are an excellent data representation, but the numbers rarely tell the whole story. The meaning of those reported numbers has its context. The rapid rate decline in GDP might have been due to many other factors, not solely decisions of policy, global stimuli, or supply changes.
The rapid spike in a stock momentum indicator could be due to induced hype you fell prey to, or news that was expected and downplayed for the quarter.
The best finding assessments are those that incorporate analysis with personal insight and human reflection. Any "why" component shared with data will keep your decisions more thoughtful and balanced.
Indicators are only data—not clever signs or tools outright replacing decision-making responsibility—. Still, they can help navigate around uncertainty and what's coming to feasible decision-making about what to do next. To enhance the meaningfulness of the indicators we have mentioned:
Keep aware of economic indicators and then endorse technical indicators.
Understand the completion relationship between leading, lagging, and coincident indicators.
Use multiple factors rather than single indicators.
Always look for context with the numbers---unless we are determining amounts or values.
Treat indicators as a navigational guide rather than truth status symbolic influences over human agency immersed in figurative meaning. If indicators can influence, it means that, with others, potentially amidst unforeseen uncertainty, using them will empower you to manage epidemic uncertainty; they can provide a more productive emergence about something in an adequate general way.
You could think of them as your virtue as a compass; your decisions ultimately lead you to the face of it all, but at least they guide you and help you refine your judgments.
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