Occurs when the stock price moves over and above an arbitrary moving average that the user specifies.
In technical analysis, when two moving averages intersect, usually a short one like a 20 day and a long one such as 40 day. This is considered a favorable sign that the underlying currency will move in the same direction.
A Golden Cross is created when shorter moving average crosses above a longer moving average. This is generally considered a bullish signal.
In technical analysis a Golden Cross is formed when a short moving average breaks above a longer one when both are rising. The signal is considered much stronger if the cross is formed after the moving averages have stayed close to each other for sometime.
An intersection of two consecutive moving averages which move in the same direction and suggest that the currency will move in the same direction.
A bullish signal created by the short-term moving averages crossing above the long-term moving averages.
A golden cross is a trading tool that indicates a buying trend is in place. A golden cross occurs when the 50-day moving average of a stock breaks above (crosses) the 200-day moving average. This technical indicator tells you that there are currently more people buying than selling the stock than in the past. Technical analysts believe a golden cross usually means it is safe to buy a stock and it will continue to rise.
A crossover involving a security's short-term moving average (such as 20-day moving average) breaking above its long-term moving average (such as 50-day moving average) or resistance level.