money indicator

  • 1Money Flow Index — (MFI) is an oscillator calculated over an N day period, ranging from 0 to 100, showing money flow on up days as a percentage of the total of up and down days. Money flow in technical analysis is typical price multiplied by volume, a kind of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 2Money Flow Index - MFI — A momentum indicator that is used to determine the conviction in a current trend by analyzing the price and volume of a given security. The MFI is used as a measure of the strength of money going in and out of a security and can be used to… …

    Investment dictionary

  • 3Money supply — Finance Financial markets Bond market …

    Wikipedia

  • 4Money — For other uses, see Money (disambiguation). Coins and banknotes – the two most common physical forms of money …

    Wikipedia

  • 5money market — the short term trade in money, as in the sale and purchase of bonds and certificates. [1925 30] * * * Set of institutions, conventions, and practices whose aim is to facilitate the lending and borrowing of money on a short term basis. The money… …

    Universalium

  • 6Money Flow Index —    A technical analysis indicator.    A volume weighted relative strength index which attempts to measure the strength of money entering and leaving the market.    ► See also Technical Analysis, Relative Strength Index …

    Financial and business terms

  • 7indicator — A measurable variable that gives information regarding performance or prospects. Examples of macroeconomic indicators are price, money supply, income, imports, and exports. Most organizations will use a range of financial and other indicators to… …

    Big dictionary of business and management

  • 8Economic indicator — Economics …

    Wikipedia

  • 9Vortex Indicator — The Vortex Indicator is a technical indicator invented by Etienne Botes and Douglas Siepman to identify the start of a new trend or the continuation of an existing trend within financial markets. It was published in the January 2010 edition of… …

    Wikipedia

  • 10Broad money — In economics, broad money is the widest measurement of the money supply. It is generally One measure of the money supply that includes M1, plus savings and small time deposits, overnight repos at commercial banks, and non institutional money… …

    Wikipedia