Does any one know any way to access historical Daily Chart given a specific NASDAQ/NYSE Ticker symbol. Example: Daily Candle chart of Google For Feb 15 2016. Thank you all.
You are actually asking for a historical intraday chart. You'll need a data vendor for that - iQFeed gives you about 9 years of 1 minute data. For every stock, that's actually a LOT of data (think several Gigabytes). Beware that most products only allow you to see currently-listed securities, so there is survivorship bias.
There are free solutions for that. What do you want to do with the data ? Just need a chart ? Some tools ? Google some ticker name, we'll find websites. -> Exchange websites, ycharts, stockcharts, barchart, finviz ... Need to process the data ? Try to google the ticker name + EOD data -> Quandl, Google / Yahoo Finance, EODDATA ..
Can you help me to see 1 week intraday chart for GOOG ticker? Is it available for free or is it a paid service?
If you're willing to download a desktops platform: https://www.interactivebrokers.com/en/index.php?f=1286 You can get an unlimited free trial with TWS Interactive Broker. This way, you'd be able to get delayed charts for whatever ticker. You could test strategies. Without having to write down trades on paper.
Thank you for all your suggestions. I do have a full account with IB and I tried to Explore TWS on Mosaic Mode for some time, But I am not able to figure how to get 1 Minute Candles for any day in past Month. For 1-min candles The MAX it shows me is 2 days, cant scroll beyond that. Can you please show me how to configure my Chart Window in IB so that I can see the Daily 1-min Chart For MGT Ticker on April 11 2016 ONLY.
I don't think this is possible with IB chart window. If you use a charting application: https://www.interactivebrokers.com/en/software/api/apiguide/tables/historical_data_limitations.htm
Thinkorswim goes back quite a bit. I haven't fully explored downloading but they have everything incorporated into that s/w so I wouldn't be surprised if you found it there too. IB charts are simplistic. Won't get much there.