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TMUS Makes Bullish Cross Above Critical Moving Average
TMUS Makes Bullish Cross Above Critical Moving Average

Forbes

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Forbes

TMUS Makes Bullish Cross Above Critical Moving Average

In trading on Thursday, shares of T-Mobile US Inc crossed above their 200 day moving average of $238.93, changing hands as high as $251.75 per share. T-Mobile US Inc shares are currently trading up about 5.8% on the day. 10 Stocks Crossing Above Their 200 Day Moving Average » The chart below shows the one year performance of TMUS shares, versus its 200 day moving average: TMUS Looking at the chart above, TMUS's low point in its 52 week range is $173.7413 per share, with $276.49 as the 52 week high point — that compares with a last trade of $248.05. The TMUS DMA information above was sourced from Can your brain be trained to become a chart-predicting wizard? Click here to find out

What is a moving average, and how do you use it?
What is a moving average, and how do you use it?

Telegraph

time01-07-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

What is a moving average, and how do you use it?

Moving averages seek to cut through the noise of wild swings in the stock market to provide a clearer picture of what is driving prices. Through the application of moving averages you can use the same techniques market professionals apply to establish whether the current price is looking expensive or cheap relative to the trend they have identified, and then profit from its future response. Here, Telegraph Money explains what a moving average is, and the strategies to use it. What is a moving average? Formula Moving average in stock trading Strategies using moving average Reasons to beware of the moving average What is a moving average? The moving average is a simple mathematical calculation that uses the mean of the closing price of any asset over a given period of time. Because it simply uses price and time periods, it can be applied to any market, from share prices, foreign currency, and commodities like oil and gold. So, for example, to use a five-day moving average you take the closing price of an asset from five consecutive days, add all these together, and then divide by the number of periods, five in this case, to calculate the first point on your chart. The average is moving because as you add every subsequent day's trading into the calculation the first price drops out from the total and you still divide by five, thus it 'moves'. It is considered a trend-following tool because it is always looking at past or lagging data. Formula The moving average calculation works as below, where 'P' refers to the closing price. The length of time can be whatever you like, but we've used five days: Five-day moving average = P1+P2+P3+P4+P5 / 5 Exponential Moving Average The exponential moving average works in a similar way, but it adds more weight to the most recent price movements, so the average reacts faster to changes in the market, and so it can allow you to identify changes in the trend more quickly. To calculate the exponential moving average you start with the same simple moving average calculation and then work out the weighted multiplier. Five-day moving average = P1+P2+P3+P4+P5 / 5 Weighted multiplier: 2 / (selected time period, in this case 5 + 1) In this example, this comes to 0.3333 or 33.33pc. Then add it all together to establish the exponential moving average. Exponential Moving Average (EMA) = Price (p) x M + EMA (y) x 1 – M In this case, p = closing price today, M = weighted multiplier and EMA (y) = EMA yesterday In our example of a five-day exponential moving average we can see it would apply a weighting of a third to the most recent closing price, and the other two thirds to the previous four days, as opposed to the simple moving average which weights each closing price a fifth. Moving average in stock trading Because you are creating an average rather than following the daily price, it smooths out the wild swings you can sometimes get in the market. Say, for example, there is somebody in the market who is forced to sell their entire holding in one day. The price of that asset on that day would fall sharply, but by looking at the moving average you would see it as an upward trend, and as an isolated event, so you could then buy on this weakness. The most commonly used averages are the 50-day, 100-day and 200-day moving averages. They work because by filtering out the daily market noise, it shows a clear trend in either a rising bull market or falling bear market.

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