Category: World View
Description:
This page tracks four of the most widely traded currencies: The U.S. Dollar, the Euro, the Japanese Yen, and the Chinese Yuan. Currencies play an important role in balancing foreign trade. When a currency loses value relative to its peers, its makes domestic exports to foreign countries more attractive while also increasing the cost of imports. When a currency gains value relative to its peers, it makes imports cheaper but hurts exports. The importance of imports or exports to a particular country varies country-by-country depending on the nature and maturity of their economy. Many factors affect currency values, like money supply (and demand), relative rates of growth, and relative rates of inflation.
How to Use the Real Motion Indicator:
The Real Motion Indicator is a calculation of momentum that is unique and proprietary to MarketGauge. The indicator represents the current period's momentum value with a dot, the 50-period moving average of that momentum with the blue line, and the 200-period moving average with a green line. The horizontal black line is referred to as the "baseline" and is plotted at the zero value to delineate positive vs. negative momentum.
Real Motion can be used to analyze and identify a number of different patterns and conditions that help us measure the strength of the trend or key turning points, however, it can also be a very powerful indicator even when used at a basic level.
The simple use and interpretation of Real Motion is to read it in the same way you would read and look for trend strength on a price chart. When the Real Motion 1-period (dot), 50-period and 200-period averages have the same pattern of stack and slope as the stock's respective price chart averages, then the momentum is in agreement with the price chart.
For example, when a stock price is over the 50-period moving average which is also over the 200-period moving average, Real Motion would "confirm" this trend as having good momentum if its 1-period value is over its 50-period average which is also over its 200-period average (both are positively stacked and sloped).
One powerful pattern to watch for is the condition where the Real Motion indicators are stronger (or weaker) than the price chart vis-a-via their respective measures. Momentum, as measured by Real Motion will often lead price action and can help identify good trades earlier than other indicators. For more advanced patterns and uses of the indicator, please see the real motion indicator product section.