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An option’s implied volatility (IV) gauges the market’s expectation of the underlying stock’s future price swings, but it doesn’t predict the direction of those movements.
The Gated Three-Tower Transformer (GT3) is a transformer-based model designed to integrate numerical market data with textual information from social sources to enhance the accuracy of stock market predictions. [12] Since NNs require training and can have a large parameter space; it is useful to optimize the network for optimal predictive ability.
Market sentiment, also known as investor attention, is the general prevailing attitude of investors as to anticipated price development in a market. [1] This attitude is the accumulation of a variety of fundamental and technical factors, including price history, economic reports, seasonal factors, and national and world events.
The Arms Index, also known as the TRIN, is part of the galaxy of technical indicators used to measure and predict the movements of the stock market. This indicator reflects the market as a whole, and is used to predict when the overall sentiment of market participants is becoming bullish or bearish.
At any given time, investors face a deluge of sentiment data from indicators like investor surveys, market volatility readings such as the VIX , options market gauges like the put/call ratio ...
With Lynch and Anderson pointing to broader economic sentiment as perhaps the key reason why rising stock prices are highly correlated with incumbent party presidential election victories, there ...
In finance the put/call ratio (or put-call ratio, PCR) is a technical indicator demonstrating investor sentiment. [1] The ratio represents a proportion between all the put options and all the call options purchased on any given day. The put/call ratio can be calculated for any individual stock, as well as for any index, or can be aggregated. [2]
Stock market prices are rising as 2024 ends and some people are worried about a possible downturn. But UBS (NYSE:UBS) analysts say there's no need to stress. They think prices will keep going up ...