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What does K-line mean?
K-line diagram is a kind of technical analysis, which was first created by the Japanese in19th century. At that time, businessmen in Japanese rice market used it to record the market and price fluctuation of rice market, including opening price, closing price, highest price and lowest price. Positive candles represented the rise of the day and negative candles represented the decline of the day. This chart analysis method was particularly popular in China and even Southeast Asia at that time. Because the chart drawn in this way looks like candles, and these candles are black and white, it is also called yin-yang line chart. Through the K-line chart, people can completely record the market performance every day or at a certain time. After a period of trading, the stock price forms a special region or form on the chart, and different forms show different meanings. Some regular things can be found from these morphological changes. The forms of K-line chart can be divided into reverse form, arrangement form, gap and trend line. The post-K-line chart is introduced into the stock market and futures market because of its ingenious and unique drawing method.

The drawing method of K-line chart in stock market and futures market includes four data: opening price, highest price, lowest price and closing price. All K-lines are centered around these four data, reflecting the general situation and price information. If you put the daily K-line chart on a piece of paper, you can get the daily K-line chart, and you can also draw the weekly K-line chart and the monthly K-line chart. If investors need to make short-term investments, they can use short-term charts for price analysis, such as 5-minute charts, 30-minute charts and 60-minute charts.

State Street Investment Bian Xiao will explain to you the meaning of various colored lines on the K-line chart: red box: it is an upward trend, indicating that the real-time stock price is higher than the opening price; Blue box: it is a downward trend, indicating that the real-time stock price is lower than the opening price; White line, pink line, yellow line, green line and red line respectively represent the daily moving average of 5/10/20/30/60/120, and lines with the same color correspond to figures, that is, the average stock price on different days. Some software moving averages are not necessarily the same color, but the meaning is the same; Specifically, if you look at the K-line chart, there is a color behind the MA value in the upper left corner, such as yellow after 5 and pink after 10, indicating that the average price on the 5th day is represented by a yellow line, and the average price on the 60th day is represented by a pink line, and so on.