Overview — in one paragraph
This is the encyclopedia: one volume that defines the field's premises and then walks every major tool — Dow Theory, trend, support/resistance, chart patterns, moving averages, oscillators, volume, point-and-figure, Elliott, cycles, and Murphy's own specialty, intermarket analysis. It teaches vocabulary and mechanics, deliberately, rather than a single method — which is exactly why it has stayed the reference for four decades.
The framework — what the book actually teaches
- PREMISESThe three premises of TA. Market action discounts everything; prices move in trends; history repeats (because psychology repeats). Whether you accept them — and how far — is the honest starting question; see market efficiency for the counter-case.
- TRENDTrend is the organizing idea. Definitions, trendlines, channels, and the three degrees of trend inherited from Dow Theory — everything else in the book hangs off this.
- PATTERNSPatterns are supply/demand pictures. Reversal and continuation structures — head & shoulders, triangles, flags — read as battles at support & resistance, always with volume as the witness. See chart patterns and volume.
- INDICATORSIndicators are derivatives of price. Moving averages for trend, oscillators (RSI, stochastics, MACD) for momentum and overbought/oversold — each with its proper regime, none universal.
- INTERMARKETMarkets are linked. Stocks, bonds, commodities and currencies move in relationships; reading one market's message in another is Murphy's signature contribution. See macro data and sectors & the business cycle.
How traders actually use it
Read it well
- Use it as a reference — read the trend and volume chapters closely, then dip in as tools come up.
- For every tool, note the stated conditions (trending vs. ranging) where it applies.
- Pair each chapter with the matching concept page here, which adds the honest-assessment layer.
Read it badly
- Treating catalogue inclusion as endorsement — Murphy documents tools; he doesn't claim each one carries an edge.
- Stacking five indicators from five chapters into one confused chart.
- Memorizing pattern names without the supply/demand logic underneath them.
Where it fits on the reading path
The textbook stop on the technical path. Read Reminiscences for the why, then this for the what, then The Art and Science of Technical Analysis (Grimes) for the evidence-based filter on which of these tools actually test out. Who it's for: anyone who wants the complete technical vocabulary in one place — it's the book this site's Technicals section is designed to sit beside.
Honest assessment
Strengths: unmatched breadth, clear teaching, and the trend/volume/intermarket chapters remain the cleanest introductions in print. As shared vocabulary for the entire field, nothing else comes close.
Limits: it's a catalogue, not a system — no entries, exits, sizing, or expectancy. It predates algorithmic markets and largely presents tools without statistical validation; later work (Grimes, Bulkowski's pattern statistics) tests what Murphy documents. Read it for fluency, not for an edge.
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