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A BAR CHART — Charts are the working tools of the technical analyst. This very old chart of a large United States steelmaker shows “a perfect Head-and-Shoulders (marked S-H-S on the chart) except that prices never broke through the neckline (N.L.)” Chartists have their own jargon, of which the previous sentence is a fine example.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19820819.2.111.16.1

Bibliographic details

Press, 19 August 1982, Page 27

Word Count
54

A BAR CHART — Charts are the working tools of the technical analyst. This very old chart of a large United States steelmaker shows “a perfect Head-and-Shoulders (marked S-H-S on the chart) except that prices never broke through the neckline (N.L.)” Chartists have their own jargon, of which the previous sentence is a fine example. Press, 19 August 1982, Page 27

A BAR CHART — Charts are the working tools of the technical analyst. This very old chart of a large United States steelmaker shows “a perfect Head-and-Shoulders (marked S-H-S on the chart) except that prices never broke through the neckline (N.L.)” Chartists have their own jargon, of which the previous sentence is a fine example. Press, 19 August 1982, Page 27