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momentumMomentum is a property that measures the tendency of a moving object to keep moving in the same direction. Increasing the speed of an object increases its momentum, and a heavy object will have more m [..]
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momentum1690s, scientific use in mechanics, "quantity of motion of a moving body," from Latin momentum "movement, moving power" (see moment). Figurative use dates from 1782.
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momentumA measure of how much effort is required to stop a body, defined as the bodys mass multiplied by its velocity. Thus, a large heavy body (e.g. a train) going relatively slowly may have more momentum t [..]
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momentumThe simple difference between the price now and the price N days ago. Momentum is negative if the price now is below the price N days ago, and positive if it is above.
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momentumspeed, direction, or velocity at which something moves.
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momentuman impelling force or strength; "the car's momentum carried it off the road" the product of a body's mass and its velocity; "the momentum [..]
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momentumthe force possessed by a body in motion, weight
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momentumn. An impetus.
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momentumThe 'hidden' energy held within a moving object due to its weight (or mass) and its speed (or velocity).
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momentumA leading indicator measuring a security's rate-of-change. The ongoing plot forms an oscillator that moves above and below 100. Bullish and bearish interpretations are found by looking for di [..]
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momentumDefinition The perceived strength behind a price movement. Momentum investors seek to take advantage of upward or downward trends in stock prices or earnings. They believe that these stocks will conti [..]
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momentum The product of mass times velocity. Momentum is conserved in any system of particles.
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momentumMomentum is the product of the mass and velocity (speed) of an object (p = mv).
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momentumThe product of the mass times the velocity of an object.
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momentumIn technical analysis, the relative change in price over a specific time interval. Often equated with speed or velocity and considered in terms of relative strength.
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momentumMomentum is an extension to the Gradient Descent Algorithm that accelerates or damps the parameter updates. In practice, including a momentum term in the gradient descent updates leads to better conve [..]
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momentumvector quantity that is the product of an object’s mass and velocity; the general effect of ongoing motion. month -
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momentumAny of a series of technical studies (e.g. RSI, MACD, Stochastics, Momentum) that assess the rate of change in prices.
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momentumProperty that allows moving things to overcome resistance and keep moving in the same direction. Works well with physical objects like cars and bowling balls. But does it work with stock prices ...? S [..]
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momentumThe product of the mass and velocity of a moving body.
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momentumMomentum is considered to be a measure of the quantity of motion in a body. The momentum of a body is defined as the product of its mass and velocity. Its SI units are kg m /s.
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momentummass * velocity
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momentumIn Israeli-Palestinian relations, blowing on the ice-cold ashes of the Oslo Accords and hoping for a nice warm fire.
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momentum(n) an impelling force or strength(n) the product of a body's mass and its velocity
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momentumA property of mass that is moving; equal to the product of an object's mass and velocity (Lesson 15)
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momentumN moment| importance| influence; motion| movement; impulse| effort
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momentumthe speed or force of something that is moving.
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momentumMomentum is the product of the mass of a moving object and the velocity of the object momentum is a vector quantity
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momentumThe principle that when a system of masses is subject only to internal forces that the masses of the system exert on one another the total vector momentum of the system is constant.
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momentum(plural: momenta). The momentum of a moving object is the product (result of multiplication) of its mass and velocity; like velocity, momentum is a vector. The law of conservation of momentum states t [..]
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momentumA force represented by a weight and the velocity with which it is moved.
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momentumCaptures sustained relative performance and its effect on risk. Uses relative strength and historical alphas.
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momentumThe ability of the attacking team to speed up play while retaining possession so that their opponents are less and less able to defend. It usually reflects their ability to get over the gain line from each attacking phase.
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momentumThe energy that a skier has stored in their movement. Momentum calculated by mass multiplied by velocity, and therefore has a defined direction.
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momentum – When a stock price shows continued progress in one direction.
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momentumIn technical analysis, the relative change in price over a specific time interval. Often equated with speed or velocity and considered in terms of relative strength.
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momentumThe amount of acceleration of an economic, price, or volume movement. A trader that follows a movement strategy will purchase stocks that have recently risen in price.
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