Traders also mostly use the tick data to judge the direction of the handicap, and usually short-term or ultra-short-term people will pay attention to the tick data. This data has a remarkable feature, which is not represented by K line, but by line segment. Therefore, there is no K-line in the time-sharing transaction data, but only a line segment that fluctuates up and down, which looks like an ECG wave.
Minute closing point data also refers to the time-sharing trading volume and energy trading of the handicap and the single purchase data. As long as it is time-sharing and segmented data, it can be called minute transaction point data. Analyzing the data of ticking points requires some financial knowledge, just like analyzing the K-line chart. Moreover, it is more difficult to analyze the data of ticking point than K-line, because the data of ticking point is too short, changing at any time and place, and the ups and downs are extremely obvious, which is difficult for people with weak psychological quality to operate.
For traders who only do short-term trading or ultra-short-term trading, the tick data is very important for analysis. Because these short-term operators are buying on the same day and selling on the same day, or throwing them out as long as there is profit.
The tick data is not so important for band operators or long-term operators. Because long-term operators mostly look at the K-line and shape, they think it is too short to analyze the disk surface with the data of the minute transaction point, so they don't know how to judge the direction.
Therefore, the split transaction point data is more suitable for futures or foreign exchange trading, because most of these two trading varieties are short-term operations. The tick data in the stock market is rarely used. The stock is a t+ 1 strategy, and it can only be sold the next day if it is bought on the same day. If we analyze it with fractional data, it is likely to lead to our own losses.