Volume is simply the number of shares or contracts that
trade over a given period of time, usually a day. The higher the volume, the
more active the security. To determine the movement of the volume (up or down),
chartists look at the volume bars that can usually be found at the bottom of
any chart. Volume bars illustrate how many shares have traded per period and
show trends in the same way that prices do.The data regarding volume of a share will be readily available on your online
trading screen. Most financial sites carry data about volume.
For example if the Stocks volume for the day was
1,000,000 shares that means 1,000,000 shares were sold by someone and bought by
someone on that day.
Volume as such may not be an attractive piece of information. But try to combine the volume data with support and resistance levels – you‘ll get the real picture.
For example – Say stock A ltd broke a ‘resistance level’
and went up further. Also since it broke through a critical level we would
expect it to go up even more in the near future.
Now, let us also consider the volume traded on that day –
say 3 lakh shares were exchanged. On a normal day 1o lakh shares are traded. That
means, Volume was way below average for that day. So, all the big investors
were not trading. They could come in the very next day and decide they
are bearish on the stock. They sell and cause a panic. So the stock goes down
the next day.
This is the importance of ‘volume’. Most traders will not
buy a stock when it breaks a critical level unless volume is high. The reverse
is also true. If a stock goes down with little volume it could mean the same
thing. The majority of investors were not trading. When they come
back they could see this stock and decide it is too low. So they buy
it and the price goes up.
In short, Volume is a critical factor in technical
analysis. Any support and resistance level is not valid unless it is backed by
adequate volume. Volume should move with the trend. If prices are moving in an
upward trend, volume should increase (and vice versa). If the previous
relationship between volume and price movements starts to deteriorate, it is
usually a sign of weakness in the trend. For example, if the stock is in an
uptrend but the up trading days are marked with lower volume, it is a sign that
the trend is starting to lose its legs and may soon end.