Series 162 Technical Analysis, Market Indicators, and Sentiment Measures Guide
May 12, 2026
Study technical analysis, market indicators, and sentiment measures for FINRA Series 162 Supervisory Analyst Part II with learning objectives, report-review controls, and exam traps.
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This Series 162 lesson covers technical analysis, market indicators, and sentiment measures within Review the Content of the Report to Ensure a Reasonable Basis Exists for the Analyst’s Conclusions. Read it as a supervisory analyst report-review lesson: the exam usually asks whether the report’s sources, calculations, assumptions, valuation work, or conclusions are accurate, consistent, and supportable enough for approval.
Learning Objectives
Assess whether market sentiment, advance-decline, momentum, or available-funds commentary genuinely supports the report’s conclusion.
Determine whether support, resistance, moving averages, or trend-line analysis is applied consistently with the time horizon of the recommendation.
Evaluate whether breakout, consolidation, stabilization, overbought, or oversold terminology is used accurately and not as a substitute for analysis.
Identify the supervisory issue when technical indicators and fundamental valuation point to different conclusions without reconciliation.
Assess whether trading volume is used appropriately to confirm or challenge the technical pattern cited.
Determine whether the report distinguishes short-term technical evidence from long-term fundamental valuation logic clearly enough for approval.
Evaluate whether technical analysis is being used within its limits rather than overstating certainty about price direction.
Identify the best follow-up when the technical discussion is plausible but does not support the strength of the final recommendation.
Key Concepts
Reasonable-basis review asks whether the conclusion follows from the evidence, not whether the story sounds persuasive.
Models, estimates, valuation methods, economics, industry context, company analysis, ratios, and risk measures must support the rating or target proportionately.
A strong recommendation needs support that is comparably strong and internally consistent.
Exam Focus
This section is most likely to test model architecture, assumption flow, internal links, projection drivers, estimate-change support, DCF logic, terminal assumptions, relative valuation, multiples, peer sets, target-price bridges, ratings, outlooks, price targets, recommendation alignment, thesis support, catalysts, downside cases, economics, fixed income, equity information, industry appraisal, company valuation, growth, management appraisal, forecasting, risk analysis, ratios, leverage, tax accounting, analytical adjustments, technical analysis, market indicators, and sentiment measures. Strong answers challenge the weak point in the report rather than rewriting the report from scratch. Weak answers often accept a conclusion because the model, table, or narrative looks sophisticated.
Series 162 rewards evidence discipline. The supervisory analyst should ask whether the report is internally consistent, whether the method fits the conclusion, and whether the recommendation is proportionate to the support shown.
How to Apply This Section
Start by naming the conclusion being tested: estimate, rating, target price, thesis, valuation output, economic inference, ratio interpretation, or technical claim. Then ask whether the assumptions, method, inputs, peer set, scenario analysis, and risk discussion actually support that conclusion.
Use this sequence when a vignette gives several numbers or claims:
Step
Question
Why it matters
Identify the claim
What conclusion, input, estimate, ratio, valuation, or risk statement is being tested?
It keeps the review focused.
Check the source
Is the input current, labeled, credible, permitted, and consistent with the report?
Weak sources weaken the approval basis.
Reconcile the support
Do tables, statements, per-share figures, ratios, assumptions, and narrative claims agree?
Internal inconsistency is a supervisory defect.
Test proportionality
Does the strength of the conclusion match the strength of the evidence?
Ratings and targets should not outrun support.
Decision Table
If the stem includes…
First concern
Stronger answer pattern
unlabeled estimate or mixed data sources
source quality
label, verify, and reconcile before relying on it
ratio, per-share, or table mismatch
calculation integrity
recalculate and correct the inconsistent support
aggressive model assumption
valuation support
challenge the assumption and require explanation
rating or target stronger than the analysis
recommendation alignment
revise or reject until the conclusion is proportionate
broad macro, industry, or technical claim
relevance
connect it to issuer-specific support or reduce reliance
Common Pitfalls
Accepting a polished narrative without testing the logic chain.
Treating one valuation method as enough when the recommendation overreaches the total support.
Letting technical, macro, or industry commentary substitute for issuer-specific evidence.
Review Checklist
Before leaving this section, make sure you can address these points:
Assess whether market sentiment, advance-decline, momentum, or available-funds commentary genuinely supports the report’s conclusion.
Determine whether support, resistance, moving averages, or trend-line analysis is applied consistently with the time horizon of the recommendation.
Evaluate whether breakout, consolidation, stabilization, overbought, or oversold terminology is used accurately and not as a substitute for analysis.
Identify the supervisory issue when technical indicators and fundamental valuation point to different conclusions without reconciliation.
Assess whether trading volume is used appropriately to confirm or challenge the technical pattern cited.
Determine whether the report distinguishes short-term technical evidence from long-term fundamental valuation logic clearly enough for approval.
Evaluate whether technical analysis is being used within its limits rather than overstating certainty about price direction.
Identify the best follow-up when the technical discussion is plausible but does not support the strength of the final recommendation.
Explain whether the defect is a source, calculation, model, valuation, or conclusion-support problem.
State what the supervisory analyst should challenge before approving the report.
Key Takeaways
Series 162 is a report-support exam, not a general finance essay exam.
The best answer usually identifies the weakest source, calculation, assumption, or conclusion link.
A persuasive research narrative is not enough if the support is stale, inconsistent, mislabeled, or disproportionate.
When two answers seem plausible, choose the one that makes the report more internally consistent and defensible.