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Accumulative Swing Index And The McClellan Oscillator : McClellan Oscillator : The McClellan Oscillator, developed by Sherman and Marian McClellan in the late 1960s, calculates the difference between two exponential moving averages by using the advances and declines from the same day period. Now, this may be the most important part to understand: the two moving averages are always 19 and 39 time periods and represent 10% and 5% trend values, respectively. Professional charting software programs like Tradestation and others use 19 and 39-day periods as the default periods, but many chartists will experiment with other periods in an attempt to fine tune their studies. If you do use the 19/39 model, the McClellan is a good short-term indicator, anticipating positive and negative changes in the advance/decline stats for better market timing. The McClellan Oscillator uses averages and differences based on this data to gauge market breadth. To plot the McClellan Oscillator accurately, the chart must contain both the advancing issues and the declining issues, and the inputs must specify the correct data number for each. Because the McClellan Oscillator uses exponential averages, the numeric value of the McClellan Oscillator will depend on the data available in the chart. If a stock market index is rallying but more issues are declining than advancing, then the rally is narrow and much of the stock market is not participating. Similar to the moving average convergence/divergence, the McClellan Oscillator is a momentum indicator. When the short-term average moves above the long-term average, a positive value is recorded. As with most oscillators, the McClellan Oscillator shows an overbought issue when the indicator measures in the positive 70 to 100 range, and it shows an oversold issue in the minus 70 to 100 range. Buy signals are indicated when the oscillator advances from oversold levels to positive levels, and, conversely, sell signals are indicated by declines from overbought to negative territory. A rising trendline of troughs and peaks would be a positive sign to the trader while falling tops and bottoms would bring out the sellers. ![]() In the 2002 chart of Exxon Mobil (XOM) you can see at the bottom of the chart that the plot is 81.19, indicating a sell signal for the issue. These indicators serve as confirmation indicators to those of us who need to double check our findings on a regular basis. Remember, it's your money - invest it wisely. |