BookBrief
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets cover
Archivist's Choice

Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets

John J. Murphy (1999)

Genre

Finance

Reading Time

900 min

Key Themes

See below

Track Your Reading

Sign in to track this book

Learn how to predict market behavior and achieve financial success with this guide to technical analysis, updated for all financial markets.

Core Idea

Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets explains how to interpret price action and other market data to predict future price movements. It proposes that all known information is already reflected in price. By studying historical price patterns, volume, and other indicators, traders can identify trends, reversals, and support/resistance levels to make informed trading decisions. The book stresses the importance of understanding market psychology, as seen in charts, and promotes a disciplined, systematic approach to trading based on visual pattern recognition and indicator confirmation.
Reading time
900 min
Difficulty
Medium
✓ Read this if...
You are a beginner or intermediate trader looking for a comprehensive, foundational guide to technical analysis, covering all major concepts and tools from chart patterns to indicators and intermarket analysis. This book is essential for anyone wanting to understand how to read and interpret financial charts.
✗ Skip this if...
You are an experienced quantitative trader primarily focused on algorithmic high-frequency trading or complex statistical modeling, or if you exclusively believe in fundamental analysis and dismiss the predictive power of chart patterns.

Core idea

The central argument and framework that powers the entire book.

Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets explains how to interpret price action and other market data to predict future price movements. It proposes that all known information is already reflected in price. By studying historical price patterns, volume, and other indicators, traders can identify trends, reversals, and support/resistance levels to make informed trading decisions. The book stresses the importance of understanding market psychology, as seen in charts, and promotes a disciplined, systematic approach to trading based on visual pattern recognition and indicator confirmation.

At a glance

Reading time

900 min

Difficulty

Medium

Read this if...

You are a beginner or intermediate trader looking for a comprehensive, foundational guide to technical analysis, covering all major concepts and tools from chart patterns to indicators and intermarket analysis. This book is essential for anyone wanting to understand how to read and interpret financial charts.

Skip this if...

You are an experienced quantitative trader primarily focused on algorithmic high-frequency trading or complex statistical modeling, or if you exclusively believe in fundamental analysis and dismiss the predictive power of chart patterns.

Key Takeaways

1

The Enduring Power of Price Action

Price charts are the ultimate expression of market psychology and the most reliable indicator.

Quote

The price chart is the single most important tool in technical analysis. It is a visual history of the market's collective judgment.

Murphy argues that all known information, both fundamental and psychological, is already reflected in a security's price. Therefore, the most effective way to analyze a market is by studying its price action through charts. He explains that price charts—line, bar, or candlestick—show supply and demand, letting traders identify trends, reversals, and consolidation patterns. This view suggests that focusing on raw price data, rather than trying to understand many underlying causes, offers a better and timelier way to make market timing ...

Supporting evidence

Murphy's extensive use of historical bar and candlestick charts across various markets (futures, stocks) to demonstrate recurring patterns and their predictive utility, such as identifying head-and-shoulders formations or double tops/bottoms purely from price. He frequently illustrates how past price behavior, when charted, provides insight into future probabilities.

Apply this

Prioritize direct observation of price charts over complex indicator analysis, especially for identifying primary trends. Learn to read basic chart patterns like support/resistance, trendlines, and common reversal formations before layering on other tools. Make price action the core of your trading decisions.

price-actionchart-patternsmarket-psychology
2

Trends Are Your Truest Friends

Identifying and trading with the prevailing trend is the cornerstone of profitable technical analysis.

Quote

The first and most important rule of technical analysis is to trade with the trend, not against it.

Murphy states that the main goal of technical analysis is to identify and use market trends. He divides trends into three types: primary (long-term), secondary (intermediate), and minor (short-term). He stresses that the primary trend sets the overall direction and offers the most profit. Trading against a strong primary trend is high-risk, while aligning with it increases success. The book describes how to identify trends using trendlines, moving averages, and pattern recognition. It notes that once a trend starts, it usually continu...

Supporting evidence

Murphy discusses Dow Theory extensively, which posits that markets move in trends and that these trends have three phases. He illustrates how drawing simple trendlines on charts of commodities like crude oil or major stock indices (e.g., S&P 500 futures) can clearly delineate the direction of the market for extended periods, highlighting the folly of attempting to pick tops or bottoms prematurely.

Apply this

Always determine the primary trend of a security before making any trading decisions. Use multiple timeframes to confirm the trend (e.g., daily chart for primary, hourly for entry). Avoid fighting strong trends; instead, look for opportunities to enter in the direction of the trend on pullbacks.

trend-identificationdow-theorytrendlinesmoving-averages
3

Reversals: The Turning Points

Mastering the recognition of reversal patterns is crucial for timely entry and exit from trades.

Quote

While trend recognition is paramount, the ability to spot trend reversals is equally vital for both profitable entry and timely exit.

Beyond just following trends, Murphy focuses on signs that a trend is losing strength and might reverse. He introduces classic reversal patterns like Head and Shoulders, Double Tops/Bottoms, Triple Tops/Bottoms, and various candlestick reversal formations. These patterns, often with volume changes, signal a shift between buyers and sellers. Understanding them helps traders exit weak positions before big losses or start new positions early in a new trend. The book emphasizes confirmation—waiting for a clear break of a trendline or neck...

Supporting evidence

Murphy provides detailed chart examples of a 'Head and Shoulders' top formation in a stock index, showing how the volume typically declines on the second shoulder and then spikes on the break of the neckline, confirming the reversal. He also covers 'key reversal days' in futures markets, where a new high is made, but the market closes significantly lower, often on heavy volume.

Apply this

Learn to identify common reversal chart patterns and candlestick formations. Always wait for confirmation of a reversal (e.g., a clear break of a support/resistance level or trendline) rather than anticipating it. Combine reversal signals with volume analysis for higher probability trades.

reversal-patternshead-and-shouldersdouble-top-bottomcandlestick-patterns
4

Volume Confirms Price

Volume provides critical insight into the conviction behind price movements, acting as a crucial secondary indicator.

Quote

Volume is the fuel that powers the market. Price movements are much more significant when accompanied by heavy volume.

Murphy stresses that volume, the number of shares or contracts traded, confirms price action. He says that big price moves on high volume show strong conviction and are more likely to last, while price changes on low volume suggest less interest and are often less reliable. For example, a breakout from a consolidation pattern is more believable if it comes with a surge in volume. Conversely, a reversal pattern with decreasing volume might mean the reversal lacks strength. Volume analysis helps distinguish between real market shifts an...

Supporting evidence

Murphy frequently shows charts with volume bars beneath the price action, pointing out how breakouts from trading ranges are often accompanied by a distinct increase in volume, validating the move. He also details how a lack of volume on a new high in an uptrend can signal potential weakness or exhaustion.

Apply this

Always analyze volume alongside price. Look for increasing volume during trend-following moves and breakouts, and decreasing volume during corrections within a trend. Be wary of price movements, especially reversals, that are not confirmed by corresponding volume changes.

volume-analysisconfirmationmarket-strengthbreakouts
5

Support and Resistance: The Price Magnets

These critical price levels act as invisible barriers and floors, dictating future price behavior.

Quote

Support and resistance levels are areas on a chart where buying or selling pressure is expected to be strong enough to prevent the price from moving further in a particular direction.

Murphy highlights support and resistance as basic technical analysis concepts. These are price levels where buying (support) or selling (resistance) pressure is strong enough to stop or reverse a trend. Support often appears at previous lows or where significant buying started, while resistance occurs at previous highs or where selling dominated. He explains the 'polarity' principle: a broken resistance level often becomes future support, and vice-versa. These levels are zones, not exact lines, and their importance grows with the amou...

Supporting evidence

Murphy illustrates this with examples of previous swing highs in a stock becoming significant resistance points on subsequent rallies, often turning the price back down. He also shows how a major support level in a commodity future, once decisively broken, acted as a strong resistance level when the price attempted to rally back to it.

Apply this

Identify significant support and resistance zones on your charts. Use these levels to anticipate potential price reversals or consolidations. When a support or resistance level is broken, consider its new role (e.g., old resistance becomes new support) and adjust your trading strategy accordingly.

support-resistancepolarity-principleprice-levelstrading-range
6

Candlesticks: Unveiling Market Sentiment

Japanese candlestick charts offer a rich visual language for understanding short-term market psychology.

Quote

Candlestick charts provide a deeper insight into the immediate psychology of the market than traditional bar charts, through their visual representation of opening and closing prices.

Murphy covers Japanese candlestick charting, noting its ability to show market sentiment and short-term price action better than traditional bar charts. Each candlestick, with its 'real body' (open to close) and 'shadows' (high to low), visually shows the struggle between buyers and sellers in a specific timeframe. He introduces many single, double, and triple candlestick patterns—like Doji, Hammer, Engulfing, and Morning/Evening Stars—each with specific bullish or bearish meanings, especially at support/resistance levels or at the en...

Supporting evidence

Murphy provides numerous examples of 'Hammer' patterns forming at the bottom of a downtrend, signaling a potential reversal, or 'Bearish Engulfing' patterns at the top of an uptrend, indicating a likely downturn. He clearly illustrates how the size and color of the real body, combined with the length of the shadows, tell a compelling story about market participants' behavior.

Apply this

Integrate candlestick charts into your analysis, particularly for identifying short-term reversals and confirming trend strength. Learn key candlestick patterns and understand their psychological implications, especially when they appear near critical support/resistance levels.

candlestick-chartingdojiengulfing-patternmarket-sentiment
7

Intermarket Analysis: The Web of Relationships

Understanding correlations between different asset classes provides a broader, more robust market perspective.

Quote

No market exists in a vacuum. The interrelationships between bonds, stocks, commodities, and currencies provide crucial clues to future market direction.

A progressive aspect of Murphy's work, especially for its time, is its focus on intermarket analysis. He argues that financial markets are connected and that changes in one asset class can predict movements in others. For example, he explains how bond market trends often come before stock market trends, how commodity prices can affect inflation and interest rates, and how the U.S. Dollar's strength or weakness impacts commodity prices and corporate earnings. By watching key markets like bonds, stocks, commodities, and currencies simul...

Supporting evidence

Murphy discusses the typical inverse relationship between bond prices and stock prices (a rising bond market often precedes a strong stock market) and the inverse relationship between the U.S. Dollar and commodity prices. He might illustrate how a significant move in crude oil often correlates with movements in energy stocks or inflation expectations.

Apply this

Incorporate intermarket analysis into your routine. Regularly check the trends and relative strength of major asset classes (stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies) to gain a broader market perspective. Look for divergences or confirmations across markets to strengthen your trading convictions.

intermarket-analysiscorrelationsasset-classesmacro-economics
8

Oscillators: Measuring Momentum and Overbought/Oversold

Oscillators provide valuable insights into the speed and magnitude of price changes, signaling potential reversals.

Quote

While trend-following indicators are best suited for trending markets, oscillators excel in sideway or choppy markets, identifying overbought and oversold conditions.

Murphy details how useful oscillators, such as the Relative Strength Index (RSI), Stochastic Oscillator, and Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD), are as tools to complement price action and trend analysis. Oscillators work well in non-trending or range-bound markets, where they help identify overbought (price too high, likely to fall) or oversold (price too low, likely to rise) conditions, signaling possible reversals. They also measure the momentum of price changes, with differences between price and oscillator often showing...

Supporting evidence

Murphy demonstrates how an RSI reading above 70 in an uptrending stock can signal an overbought condition, suggesting a potential pullback, or how a bullish divergence (price making lower lows, but the oscillator making higher lows) can precede an upward reversal. He would show examples of MACD crossovers generating buy/sell signals.

Apply this

Use oscillators like RSI and Stochastics to identify overbought/oversold conditions and potential divergences, especially in range-bound markets or for tactical entries within a trend. Combine oscillator signals with price action and trend analysis for confirmation, rather than using them in isolation.

oscillatorsrsistochastic-oscillatormacdoverbought-oversold
9

The Importance of Chart Construction and Timeframes

Accurate chart construction and multi-timeframe analysis are fundamental for reliable technical insights.

Quote

The accuracy of your technical analysis depends directly on the accuracy of your charts. Always use clean, properly scaled charts.

Murphy states that effective technical analysis relies on well-made charts. He details the importance of using proper scaling (arithmetic vs. semi-log), clear labeling, and understanding different chart types (bar, line, candlestick). Beyond construction, he advocates for multi-timeframe analysis, arguing that looking at a single timeframe gives an incomplete picture. A security might be in a short-term downtrend on an hourly chart but still in a strong primary uptrend on a daily or weekly chart. Analyzing trends and patterns across d...

Supporting evidence

Murphy illustrates how a minor pullback on a daily chart might look like a significant downtrend on an hourly chart, leading to incorrect trading decisions if only the hourly chart is observed. He demonstrates how drawing trendlines on a weekly chart gives a much stronger, more reliable signal than one drawn on a 15-minute chart.

Apply this

Always use clean, well-scaled charts. Practice viewing markets across multiple timeframes (e.g., weekly, daily, hourly) to understand the broader context and to confirm trends and patterns. Ensure your short-term trades are aligned with the prevailing longer-term trend.

chart-constructiontimeframe-analysisscalingmulti-timeframe
10

Risk Management and Trading Discipline

Even the best analysis is useless without strict risk control and unwavering emotional discipline.

Quote

Technical analysis can provide the signals, but it is proper money management and emotional discipline that determine long-term success.

While mainly a book on technical analysis, Murphy includes the importance of risk management and trading psychology. He implies that even with perfect chart reading skills, a lack of discipline in managing capital or emotions will lead to failure. The book's focus on clear entry/exit signals from patterns and indicators supports a disciplined approach, as these signals provide objective action criteria. Though it doesn't detail complex money management formulas, the emphasis on identifying stop-loss levels (e.g., below support, above ...

Supporting evidence

While not a dedicated chapter, Murphy consistently integrates risk management principles throughout the book, particularly when discussing entry and exit points for various patterns. For example, when discussing a 'Head and Shoulders' top, he would implicitly or explicitly mention placing a stop-loss above the right shoulder if shorting, or above the neckline once it's broken, demonstrating how technical levels define risk.

Apply this

Always define your risk before entering a trade by setting clear stop-loss levels based on technical analysis. Never risk more than a small percentage of your capital on any single trade. Develop emotional discipline to stick to your trading plan, avoiding impulsive decisions driven by fear or greed.

risk-managementtrading-psychologydisciplinestop-loss

Critical analysis

Notable Quotes

The market discounts everything.

One of the three core tenets of technical analysis, highlighting that all known and foreseeable factors are already priced into the market.

Price moves in trends.

The second core tenet, asserting that prices do not move randomly but rather in discernible directions that persist for periods.

History repeats itself.

The third core tenet, based on the premise that human psychology and market reactions to events tend to be consistent over time, leading to recurring price patterns.

A trend is assumed to be in effect until demonstrated otherwise.

A crucial principle for trend-following strategies, emphasizing that once a trend is established, it's more likely to continue than to reverse.

Volume must confirm price.

Highlighting the importance of volume as a secondary indicator; strong price movements should be accompanied by high volume to be considered significant.

The longer the base, the higher in space.

Referring to consolidation patterns (bases); a longer period of consolidation often leads to a more significant price move once the breakout occurs.

Support and resistance levels are simply areas where the forces of supply and demand are temporarily in balance.

Explaining the fundamental concept behind support and resistance, relating them to buying and selling pressure.

Divergence between an indicator and price often signals a weakening of the current trend and a potential reversal.

Describing how divergences, especially with oscillators, can provide early warnings of trend changes.

Moving averages are trend-following indicators by nature and work best in trending markets.

Clarifying the primary utility and limitations of moving averages, emphasizing their effectiveness in trending environments.

Candlestick charts offer a much more visual and immediate picture of price action than traditional bar charts.

Praising the visual efficiency and interpretive power of Japanese candlestick charting techniques.

The goal of the technical analyst is to identify changes in the balance of supply and demand as early as possible.

Defining the core objective of technical analysis in practical terms, focusing on anticipating market shifts.

Don't try to pick tops or bottoms; instead, identify the trend and trade with it.

A classic piece of advice for traders, advocating for trend-following over attempting to perfectly time market extremes.

Relative strength is a critical tool for comparing the performance of one security or sector against another.

Highlighting the importance of relative strength analysis in identifying leaders and laggards in the market.

The Fibonacci sequence and its related ratios appear frequently in nature and, surprisingly, in financial markets.

Introducing the concept of Fibonacci tools and their application in identifying potential support/resistance levels and price targets.

Quiz

Test Your Knowledge

Ready to see how well you understood this book? Take our interactive quiz with 10 questions.

10
Questions
~5
Minutes
?
Best Score

Key Questions (FAQ)

Technical analysis is a method of evaluating securities by analyzing statistics generated by market activity, such as past prices and volume. John J. Murphy's book teaches how these concepts apply across various financial markets, including futures and stocks, to predict future price movements.

About the author