brain2brain
- 11 Feb 2004 17:44
We have noticed that quite often when the number of shares bought exceeds the number of shares sold the share price sometimes goes down ( and in some cases by quite an amount eg African Eagle AFE today..11/2) Yet some share prices increase when there are more sells than buys eg African Diamond AFD, African Gold AFG today etc. Can someone please explain why this is, as the number or buys and sells has in the past been key to our trading strategy. Is the information on Ample or Money AM concerning trades not accurate or are we missing something. Any answers / explanations would be really welcome.
Safiande
- 25 Aug 2004 13:29
- 8 of 47
Small tick up lately but still low volume. AFE need to issue some news shortly otherwise the price will lanquish in the summer doldrums.
Abbie2u
- 26 Aug 2004 09:57
- 10 of 47
Supply/demand means shares generally must rise when more buys.However,there are
a trivial number of exceptions - technical,etc.
Kivver
- 26 Aug 2004 10:14
- 11 of 47
brain2brain - you are correct, the buys and sells are often inaccurate, read the disclaimer on the trades pages. All you have to worry about is whether the price is going up or down. You need level 2 information (which costs) if you want accurate info.
Gausie
- 26 Aug 2004 10:57
- 12 of 47
Abbie - if there's more buys then sells who have the buyers bought from?
Abbie2u
- 26 Aug 2004 15:44
- 13 of 47
Sellers
Gausie
- 26 Aug 2004 20:20
- 14 of 47
And who have the sellers sold to?
Kivver
- 27 Aug 2004 09:23
- 15 of 47
i think buys and sells are done through the mm's (someone put me right if i am wrong) so it depends on how many the mm's buy or sell. So they could buy a million and only sell 1000. Therefore demand is low from investors/traders so the price goes down and vice versa.
Gausie
- 27 Aug 2004 10:29
- 16 of 47
But if they've bought a million, surely they'd be dropping the price all the way through?
The original question relates to building a strategy based on buys and sells. ie using the buy/sell analysis to predict price movements. My point is that the price at any time already reflects any imbalance - and so I question the relevance of the analysis as a predictive tool.
brain2brain also points out that sometimes the price moves in the opposite direction to that expected by analysing trades - so in a way the questioner is drawing the same conclusion - there is no correlation. The only things that matter are the price and volume - the individual trades are a red herring. The price at which the latest trade was executed is the best guide we have to the value of the share. And the volume shows us how 'committed' the market is to that price.
He also asks whether the information on ample and moneyam is not accurate - I believe that all LSE reported trades are fed through to both of these sites, and each reports them accurately, after making a stab as to whether the trade is a 'buy' or a 'sell'. So long as punters want this analysis, these sites are bound to carry on supplying them.
Gausie
Safiande
- 27 Aug 2004 12:34
- 17 of 47
There were only two trades this a.m. of 48 & 55. What's going on? Is someone taking the p*~# ?
Abbie2u
- 28 Aug 2004 13:07
- 18 of 47
Generally speaking more buyers than sellers must equal price rise i.e.the
economic law of supply/demand.
Gausie
- 28 Aug 2004 16:37
- 19 of 47
Thank u abbie.
Concise, precise, and utter twaddle.
Melnibone
- 28 Aug 2004 16:44
- 20 of 47
If there is more folk wanting to buy than sell, then the price will
go up to attract sellers until it reaches a new equilibrium.
If there is more folk wanting to sell than buy, then the price will
go down to attract buyers until it reaches a new equilibrium.
The higher the volume, the higher the demand and the more powerfull
will be the move.
This is what other posters in this thread are also saying, IMHO.
But the 'Buy and Sell' columns have absolutely nothing to do
with any of this. All they do is record a transaction between a Buyer
and a Seller and are as about much use as a chocolate fireguard.
Melnibone.
seawallwalker
- 28 Aug 2004 17:05
- 21 of 47
I like the idea of a chocolate fireguard!!
Mmmmmmmmmmmm.
:-)))
Abbie2u
- 28 Aug 2004 18:26
- 22 of 47
Gausie - twaddle ?
Are you suggesting the economic law of supply/demand is twaddle ?
Safiande
- 03 Sep 2004 11:54
- 24 of 47
B2b,
AFE is big blue today !
brain2brain
- 03 Sep 2004 13:08
- 25 of 47
Thanks Safiande.
Its been a long wait. Lets hope it continues
B2B
Safiande
- 03 Sep 2004 13:13
- 26 of 47
This was mentioned in t1ps.
On Wednesday, www.t1ps.com revealed that Chaco Resources, the cash shell that used to be known as Goldmines of Sardinia, may have a second deal in the pipeline after a reversal of Paraguayan oil exploration acreage into the group. Market whispers suggest that the second deal is in Libya. After we broke the news to a wider audience here on UK-Analyst, the shares are rose 0.35p to 2.17p. Thursday's scoop from the UK's top financial website was that African Eagle is likely to be announcing some cracking drilling results from its Eagle Eye copper deposit in Zambia as early as next week. African Eagle shares jumped 1p to 15.25p on the revelation. For more hot tips like these click here.
brain2brain
- 06 Sep 2004 12:24
- 27 of 47
It really is beyond belief at times, the mismatch between buys, sells and share price movements. I understand from all the posts I have read here that much of the formentioned have to be taken with a pinch of salt. But how do you reconcile this mornings figures with AFE. There have been over 250 000 buys and one sell of about 10 000. What has the share price done? Absolutely nothing. Unbelievable.
Any observations would be welcome. In the meantime I am going for a lie down.
B2B