IndusInd Bank Limited

I find this data from www.nseindia.com.............. AS ON 
companyName  IndusInd Bank Limited      
symbol  INDUSINDBK       closePrice 0   
LastUpdateTime  19-APR-2018 10:12:45       cm_ffm 94058.1   
Last Price 1859.8     css_status_desc  Listed     
change 16.2     deliveryQuantity  3,80,165     
pChange 0.88     deliveryToTradedQuantity 65.98   
dayHigh 1868.95     exDate  18-JUL-17     
dayLow 1851.1     extremeLossMargin 5   
cm_adj_high_dt  17-APR-18       faceValue 10   
cm_adj_low_dt  22-MAY-17       indexVar  -     
high52 1878.35     isExDateFlag []   
low52 1375.2     isinCode  INE095A01012     
OPEN Price 1853     lastPrice 1859.8   
totalBuyQuantity 71111     marketType  N     
totalSellQuantity  1,72,527       ndEndDate  -     
totalTradedValue 4271.93     ndStartDate  -     
totalTradedVolume []     purpose  ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING\\/DIVIDEND - RS 6\\/- PER SHARE     
quantityTraded  5,76,214       recordDate  -     
priceBand  No Band       secDate  18APR2018     
pricebandlower 1659.25     securityVar 3.86   
pricebandupper 2027.95     sellPrice1 1859.85   
previousClose 1843.6     sellPrice2 1859.9   
adhocMargin  -       sellPrice3 1860   
applicableMargin 12.5     sellPrice4 1860.3   
averagePrice  1861.43    sellPrice5 1860.35   
basePrice 1843.6     sellQuantity1 14   
bcEndDatebcEndDate []     sellQuantity2 158   
bcStartDate  20-JUL-17       sellQuantity3 353   
buyPrice1 1859.55     sellQuantity4 64   
buyPrice2 1859.5     sellQuantity5 96   
buyPrice3 1859.05     series  EQ     
buyPrice4 1859     surv_indicator  -     
buyPrice5 1858.85     Todayopen 1853   
buyQuantity1 22     tradedDate  19APR2018     
buyQuantity2 408     varMargin 7.5   
buyQuantity3 26    
buyQuantity4 128    
buyQuantity5 4    
DMA - Direct market access
 Direct market access (DMA) is a term used in financial markets to describe electronic trading facilities that give investors wishing to trade in financial instruments a way to interact with the order book of an exchange. Normally, trading on the order book is restricted to broker-dealers and market making firms that are members of the exchange. Using DMA, investment companies (also known as buy side firms) and other private traders use the information technology infrastructure of sell side firms such as investment banks and the market access that those firms possess, but control the way a trading transaction is managed themselves rather than passing the order over to the broker's own in-house traders for execution. Today, DMA is often combined with algorithmic trading giving access to many different trading strategies. Certain forms of DMA, most notably ''sponsored access'', have raised substantial regulatory concerns because of the possibility of a malfunction by an investor to cause widespread market disruption.
50 DMA 1692.67 - 1651.08
40 DMA 1692.67 - 1651.08
30 DMA 1692.67 - 1651.08
20 DMA 1692.67 - 1651.08
10 DMA 1682.66 - 1646.96
5 DMA 1683.35 - 1646.52
3 DMA 1653.43 - 1617.15
Fraction - 
Result 3720.38
Support 1847.18
Resistance 1884.38
Possible  1876.78
Sell
If Possible Buy  is found nearer to Resistance  sale it for intraday
Pivot Point - 
Monthly pivot point chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average for the first 8 months of 2009, showing sets of first and second levels of resistance (green) and support (red). The pivot point levels are highlighted in yellow. Trading below the pivot point, particularly at the beginning of a trading period sets a bearish market sentiment and often results in further price decline, while trading above it, bullish price action may continue for some time. In financial markets, a pivot point is a price level that is used by traders as a possible indicator of market movement. A pivot point is calculated as an average of significant prices (high, low, close) from the performance of a market in the prior trading period. If the market in the following period trades above the pivot point it is usually evaluated as a bullish sentiment, whereas trading below the pivot point is seen as bearish. It is customary to calculate additional levels of support and resistance, below and above the pivot point, respectively, by subtracting or adding price differentials calculated from previous trading ranges of the market.[citation needed] A pivot point and the associated support and resistance levels are often turning points for the direction of price movement in a market.[1][page needed] In an up-trending market, the pivot point and the resistance levels may represent a ceiling level in price above which the uptrend is no longer sustainable and a reversal may occur. In a declining market, a pivot point and the support levels may represent a low price level of stability or a resistance to further decline.
R3  1903.07
R2  1888.13
R1  1865.87
S1  1828.67
S2  1813.73
S3  1791.47
Elliott wave -
 The Elliott wave principle is a form of technical analysis that finance traders use to analyze financial market cycles and forecast market trends by identifying extremes in investor psychology, highs and lows in prices, and other collective factors. Ralph Nelson Elliott (1871–1948), a professional accountant, discovered the underlying social principles and developed the analytical tools in the 1930s. He proposed that market prices unfold in specific patterns, which practitioners today call ''Elliott waves'', or simply waves. Elliott published his theory of market behavior in the book The Wave Principle in 1938, summarized it in a series of articles in Financial World magazine in 1939, and covered it most comprehensively in his final major work, Nature's Laws
 For Up side moves points are   For Down side moves points are 
Wave1  1836 - 1873.2 Wave1  1873.2 - 1836
Wave2  1873.2 - 1850.2104 Wave2  1836 - 1858.9896
Wave3  1850.2104 - 1910.4 Wave3  1858.9896 - 1798.8
Wave4  1910.4 - 1896.1896 Wave4  1798.8 - 1813.0104
Wave5  1896.1896 - 1933.3896 Wave5  1813.0104 - 1775.8104
1956.38 1752.82
WaveA  1933.3896 - 1919.1792 WaveA  1775.8104 - 1790.0208
WaveB  1919.1792 - 1942.1688 WaveB  1790.0208 - 1767.0312
WaveC  1942.1688 - 1919.1792 WaveC  1767.0312 - 1790.0208
FIBONACCI - 
Fibonacci retracement is a method of technical analysis for determining support and resistance levels.[1] They are named after their use of the Fibonacci sequence.[1] Fibonacci retracement is based on the idea that markets will retrace a predictable portion of a move, after which they will continue to move in the original direction. The appearance of retracement can be ascribed to ordinary price volatility as described by Burton Malkiel, a Princeton economist in his book A Random Walk Down Wall Street, who found no reliable predictions in technical analysis methods taken as a whole. Malkiel argues that asset prices typically exhibit signs of random walk and that one cannot consistently outperform market averages. Fibonacci retracement is created by taking two extreme points on a chart and dividing the vertical distance by the key Fibonacci ratios. 0.0% is considered to be the start of the retracement, while 100.0% is a complete reversal to the original part of the move. Once these levels are identified, horizontal lines are drawn and used to identify possible support and resistance levels (see trend line). The significance of such levels, however, could not be confirmed by examining the data.[2] Arthur Merrill in Filtered Waves determined there is no reliably standard retracement
 For Up side moves points are   For Down side moves points are 
5.57% 1871.13 5.57% 1838.07
9.02% 1869.84 9.02% 1839.36
14.60% 1867.77 14.60% 1841.43
23.60% 1864.42 23.60% 1844.78
38.20% 1858.99 38.20% 1850.21
50.00% 1854.60 50.00% 1854.60
61.80% 1850.21 61.80% 1858.99
76.40% 1844.78 76.40% 1864.42
78.60% 1843.96 78.60% 1865.24
85.40% 1841.43 85.40% 1867.77
94.43% 1838.07 94.43% 1871.13
200.00% 1910.40 200.00% 1798.80
194.43% 1908.33 194.43% 1800.87
185.40% 1904.97 185.40% 1804.23
178.60% 1902.44 178.60% 1806.76
176.40% 1901.62 176.40% 1807.58
161.80% 1896.19 161.80% 1813.01
150.57% 1892.01 150.57% 1817.19
138.20% 1887.41 138.20% 1821.79
127.20% 1883.32 127.20% 1825.88
114.60% 1878.63 114.60% 1830.57
105.57% 1875.27 105.57% 1833.93
Williams %R - 
Williams %R, or just %R, is a technical analysis oscillator showing the current closing price in relation to the high and low of the past N days (for a given N). It was developed by a publisher and promoter of trading materials, Larry Williams. Its purpose is to tell whether a stock or commodity market is trading near the high or the low, or somewhere in between, of its recent trading range.
 %R={high_{Ndays}-close_{today} \over high_{Ndays}-low_{Ndays}}\times -100} 
 %R = { high_{Ndays} - close_{today} \over high_{Ndays} - low_{Ndays} } \times -100 [1] 
 The oscillator is on a negative scale, from −100 (lowest) up to 0 (highest), obverse of the more common 0 to 100 scale found in many Technical Analysis oscillators. A value of −100 means the close today was the lowest low of the past N days, and 0 means today's close was the highest high of the past N days. (Although sometimes the %R is adjusted by adding 100.)  

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