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About The STA

✔️ YOU JOIN THE STA TO BE BETTER

The predecessor of the STA, the Association of Chart and Technical Analysts (ACTA) was founded in 1968, making the U.K.’s professional body for technical analysts the oldest of its kind in the world.

 

The Society of Technical Analysts (STA) is a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to the promotion and understanding of technical analysis and its role within behavioural finance as a vital investment tool. It aims to serve all members of the investment community, from the investment industry professional to interested members of the public.

The STA runs a comprehensive education programme, holds monthly lectures (also available via delayed video links on the STA website), publishes a bi-annual e-journal and offers its members access to a regular blog, IFTA webinars as well as an extensive library housed at the Barbican Library. All STA educational courses and examinations are accredited by the CISI (the Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment) and IFTA (the International Federation of Technical Analysts).

History of the STA

The predecessor of the Society of Technical Analysts (STA), the Association of Chart and Technical Analysts (ACTA) was founded in 1968, making the U.K.’s professional body for technical analysts the oldest of its kind in the world.

The founders were Teddy Clarke, of Chart Analysis, Richard Lake, a stockbroker, and Alec Ellinger, of Investment Research. They started using technical analysis in 1945 and so were real pioneers.

ACTA held monthly meetings followed by informal networking in a nearby pub. ACTA also produced and circulated a journal with latest thinking and discovery in the technical analysis field. The library, established and run by a committee member, would lend books to members on request. The STA continues to provide the same member benefits and a whole lot more!! Copies of the first eight editions of the ACTA journal 'The Chartist'  can be found in the members area here.

In November 1986, the ACTA committee, chaired by Philip Gray of GT Management, decided that, in line with the ‘big bang’ changes in the City of London, ACTA should become incorporated and be run more professionally. Other major contributors to the enactment of the change were Elli Gifford, of Investment Research, Bronwen Wood, one of the City’s most eminent equity technical analysts, and Patricia Morris. ACTA was renamed the Society of Technical Analysts (STA), with a Board of Directors. Membership categories were Associate: for those interested but not qualified; Member: those qualified by virtue of their work as technical analysts, and Fellow. The last category of members was to be nominated by its peers, for contributions to technical analysis in general, and/or the Society.

Philip Gray and Bronwen Wood also felt strongly that the STA needed to develop a formal qualification in the technical analysis field. So began the STA Diploma and the courses leading to the examinations. In the early years, Wood wrote and marked all the papers, with a small team who checked any borderline cases. Those first students would not have recognised today’s course. In the beginning, the course took the form of a solid week of evening lectures, and that was all. There are now many more lecturers teaching a much-expanded course – and more examiners to mark the papers.

The STA was one of the founder members of IFTA, the International Federation of Technical Analysts, with the initial meeting held at an MTA (Market Technicians Association) conference in Florida in May 1988. STA board members Robin Griffiths, Elli Gifford, Bronwen Wood and Anne Whitby were all very involved in the discussions about how this new organisation would be set up and run. Subsequently, the first IFTA conference was hosted in Japan in October of that year, followed by one in London in 1989, hosted by the STA. The latter was memorable for many reasons, not least that it had perhaps the greatest number of delegates of any IFTA conference until the 2014 London conference, and also because, during the conference, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, Nigel Lawson, resigned. This caused some interesting short-term chart developments for the speakers to handle.

For a number of years the STA also hosted its own annual conference, with the first in 1990 proposed and driven by John Breame, who was Chairman at the time. It was held on HMS Belfast, largely because the Board was keen to keep costs to a minimum. Partly due to the lack of space on the vessel, people were forced together more than usual, and the conference was extremely successful. After some years, and in an unfavourable market environment, the conferences were stopped.

For a few years the Annual Dinner, which in the early days had been a black tie occasion, was also not held. Thankfully this has now been reinstated. Similarly the July and December meetings have always been viewed as more social occasions, with canapés and refreshments. In previous years, the talks at these ‘parties’ were also of a more light-hearted or historical nature, with an emphasis as much on entertainment as education.

Since the early days, the STA has continued to expand and develop. In the UK, this progress is evident in membership growth, steadily improving meeting facilities, world-class technical analysis education and a library housed at the Barbican in London and easily accessible. Since 2014 there is also a reference library at the City Business Library. Overseas, the STA has been a steadfast member of IFTA, with continual representation on the board of that organisation since it began. With the STA now over 50 years old, we can be sure that the founder members of ACTA would be well pleased with the way their project has grown and developed.

The STA Committees provide direction and focus for the Society and the wider profession. Below is a list of the committee and members. Committee members are actively involved in the work of the STA and get to know some of the leaders in the technical analysis field. It’s a fantastic personal and professional development opportunity. To find out more about becoming a committee member contact: [email protected].
STA Committee Members Description

Ethics & Procedures, Corporate Governance & Compliance

Karen Jones
Anne Whitby
Vince Harvey

Ensures that the STA adheres to the highest ethical standards in all of its activities. It reviews our procedures and publications and consults with the STA Board on an ongoing basis.

Data Quality

David Watts

Highlights the importance of trustworthy financial market data to technical analysts/market participants to exchanges and has successfully lobbied data vendors, exchanges and other bodies to ensure that their data is of the highest quality.

Irish Chapter

Alan Dunne

Promotes the STA at a regional level for members who cannot make the London meetings.

Speaker Programme

Jeff Boccaccio

Organises the Speaker Programme for the monthly meetings.

Library

David Watts

Finds and purchases books and material on technical analysis, charting, market behaviour and related topics for the STA collections at the Barbican Library in London.

IFTA Liaison

Eddie Tofpik
David Watts

Liaises with the International Federation of Technical Analysts (IFTA).

Membership

Vandita Chisholm

Works on increasing the STA membership by promoting the merits of STA membership to professional and private investors.

Journal

Karen Jones
Michael Hewson

Produced the STA Market Technician is the Journal of the STA that features articles by expert members and guest writers on technical analysis and charting methods as well as book and software reviews.

STA Website

David Watts

Publishes the STA website to promote, educate and inform the public and members about the STA. Updates the “members only” section of the website with relevant information for STA members such as job postings, meeting notes and contact groups.

Marketing

Karen Jones
Eddie Tofpik
Michael Hewson
Vandita Chisholm
Katie Abberton

Markets the STA to the professional investment community and to retail investors as the professional technical analysis body in the UK. Promotes the use of technical analysis at every investment decision level and works with other bodies and groups to promote the STA’s educational courses, monthly meetings and advantages of membership.

Software Group

David Watts

Reviews new and existing technical analysis and charting software for the STA and presents its findings regularly to members through the STA Market Technician Journal and at occasional monthly meetings.

Treasurer

Karen Jones

Assesses, reviews and protects the STA’s financial wellbeing now and in the future. Short-term responsibilities include ensuring adequate cash flow for ongoing educational courses and training events, and long-term responsibilities include helping to ensure that proposed projects are likely to be financially beneficial to STA members.

Education

Axel Rudolph
Luise Kliem (Chief Examiner)

Runs the STA’s educational courses that prepare Associate Members for the STA Diploma examinations. Works with higher institutes of learning such as King’s College to teach technical analysis at their locations.

Third Party/Liaison Institutions

Jeff Boccaccio
Karen Jones
Trevor Neil

Responsible for building links and working with other financial institutions.

Investment Committee

Jeff Boccaccio
Keval Dhokia
Alan Dunne
Murray Gunn
Charlie Morris

Manage funds which the Board will call upon in the future to ensure that the STA remains recognised worldwide as one of the largest and most widely respected not-for-profit Technical Analysis organisations. The Investment Committee is therefore tasked by the Board to invest the STA’s funds in a prudent manner in order to generate above inflation long-term returns in order to safeguard member funds for future investment into the STA long-term objectives.