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Found 250 results

  1. Day traders mostly trade in the same direction of the Ax.
  2. ATR is an index of volatility, with high ATR indicating high volatility and low ATR indicating low volatility.
  3. ADX being direction-independent, can be used to determine entrance and exit points for an investment.
  4. Autoregression is the basis of technical analysis, which aims to use certain setups that produced certain trade results in the past to reproduce the same effect whenever they occur again and again.
  5. It is used by investors to ascertain whether a manager’s decisions are yielding satisfactory gains.
  6. It is considered a bullish chart pattern and is traded on the basis of a bullish breakout of the horizontal trend line.
  7. Analysts consider this to be a strong buy signal.
  8. An ascending channel is seen in an uptrend and the trading strategy is to buy at the bounce on the lower trend line.
  9. This is a subjective order screening technique that investors can set on their own to avoid buying or selling at minor changes in price, or to only enter positions when a certain level of percentage change in price has been achieved.
  10. The Aroon Indicator is made up of an Aroon Up and Aroon Down components. Values closer to 100 indicates a strong trend while values close to zero show a weak trend. If the value of Aroon Up is lower than Aroon Down, this shows a weak uptrend and vice versa.
  11. A TRIN value above one is a bullish signal, less than one is a bearish signal while a TRIN value with a unit value of one is a sign of a balanced market. The Arms Index is named after Richard Arms.
  12. It is not a very good indicator as it can be overly affected by extremes in either direction.
  13. The lines of the indicator look like a handle with prongs, hence the name pitchfork.
  14. Amplitude is positive when calculating a bullish retracement, and negative when calculating a bearish retracement.
  15. Advances and Declines form an integral part of analytic tools like the advance-decline ratio and advance-decline index.
  16. It is used by most traders to confirm the strength of a trend and the possibility of its reversal.
  17. It is a good indicator of market movements.
  18. It helps day traders to profit in unstable markets by signaling price movements.
  19. It is commonly used to confirm trend-line breakouts on price charts.
  20. The logical trading strategy for an asset which has reached its accumulation area is to buy the asset. Traders therefore watch out for areas where the asset shows accumulation so as to enter long positions at these points.
  21. It is normally calculated using the NYSE.
  22. Many active traders make the mistake of assuming that a winning system for swing trading stocks needs to be complicated. On the contrary, the best trading strategies are typically the most simple because they can be more easily and consistently followed. Our methodology for picking stocks is simple, as 99% of the stocks we buy in our model trading portfolio come from one of the following three setups: 1. Combo Setup – The stock must have a combination of great earnings growth and strong technical price action (some type of bullish chart pattern). Typically, these stocks are growing their earnings at a rate of 30 to 40% (or more) quarter after quarter. Furthermore, these stocks will usually have an IBD relative strength rating of 80 or higher. Since we consider these stocks to be A-rated, they can usually be held for several weeks or more. 2. Price momentum - With this swing trade setup, earnings growth is not important, but the stock must have a top relative strength rating (95 or higher) and belong to an industry sector group that is outperforming the S&P 500. These stocks can be held for a few days to a few weeks. Our recent trade in Celldex Therapuetics ($CLDX), a biotechnology stock with a relative strength rating greater than 95, is a good example of a swing trade setup based purely on momentum (bullish price action). Last month, we netted a 15% gain on our swing trade in $CLDX and will soon be posting an educational video review of that trade on our blog. 3. Blast Off - Neither earnings growth nor a top relative strength rating is necessary with this type of swing trading setup. We are simply looking for a monster spike in volume on the daily chart, combined with a 4% or more gain in that same session. This indicates huge demand. If demand is sharply greater than supply, the price has no choice but to surge higher (which is why volume is such a great technical indicator). With this setup, the one-day volume spike should be at least 2.5 to 3 times greater than the 50-day moving average of volume. These stocks can be held for a few days to a few weeks (as long as the price action remains excellent). A current example of the “Combo” setup (#1 above) can be found in Michael Kors Holding Limited ($KORS). So, let’s take a closer look at how this trade meets our parameters. For starters, the expected earnings growth of $KORS in the coming quarter is 81%, so the requirement for strong earnings growth is definitely covered. Its IBD relative strength rating is only 71, but that is compensated for by the monstrous earnings growth the company has been experiencing. Next, let’s take a look at the technical chart pattern. After several months of choppy price action, $KORS is starting to come together nicely. Upon completing a 20% pullback off its February 2013 high, $KORS found support at its 200-day moving average, then rallied to reclaim its 50-day moving average last week. Now, $KORS is working on forming a bullish chart pattern known as a “cup and handle,” which looks like this: As shown on the chart below, $KORS formed the left side of the cup and handle pattern from March to late April, and is now working on the right side of the pattern. The right side of the pattern will need several weeks to develop and form a handle with a proper buy point. During this time, the stock needs to hold above its 50-day moving average as well. This annotated chart of $KORS shows what we are looking for: YRC Worldwide, Inc. ($YRCW) is a great example of a “Blast Off” setup (#3 above). Notice the huge volume and sharp gap above resistance that occurred last Friday (May 3): As of the first 30 minutes of trading in today’s session (May 6), $YRCW is trading more than 20% higher than the previous day’s close. Obviously, such a huge follow-up price gap is not common; nevertheless, it shows you just how powerful the “Blast Off” setup can be: If not already holding this stock, the setup is definitely NOT buyable for swing trading right now (we never chase stocks). However, if/when it forms a proper base of consolidation from here, we can begin to look for a low-risk buy point (at which time we would notify Wagner Daily subscribers of our exact entry, stop, and target prices). As previously mentioned, we will soon be posting on our stock trading blog an educational review of last month’s winning swing trade in $CLDX, which will be an example of our “Price Momentum” setup.
  23. This stock isn't going to be the next big mover like Apple (AAPL) was in its hay-day, but it has formed a bottom and signaled the start of a move higher last week. Bottoming formations take time and typically have multiple retests of prior lows, breakdown failures (BDF) and false starts. One signal that has had a high degree of not being a false start coming out of a base is the Bullish Wide Range Bar (+WRB) on increasing volume. After falling lower with virtually no bounces at all in 2011, Corning Inc. (GLW) began to form a bottom. Like most bottoming formations GLW had its retests, failed attempts to move higher, (none ever cleared any prior highs) and a breakdown failure that was retested. Notice after the move up from that retest GLW based sideways at resistance. Pristine Tip: Basing at resistance after a move up signals buyers absorbing the supply and bullish. Last week, GLW formed a +WRB with increasing volume and closed above its recent resistance area. Look further to the left and you will see other large green candles, some even with an increase in volume, but none of them cleared prior highs. Those prior highs still have to be overcome; however, the price action that has occurred after them suggests that is going to happen. By putting together the parts of the overall price action that has occurred we have the making of a bottom and bullish signal. I could have put a few indicators on the chart to show you how they are becoming bullish and signaling a move higher also. Most likely would create a belief in those indicators as a reliable way of determining a bottom. In time, you would be moving on to the next indicator someone else used. This is the cycle most go through forever and never understand how to read the interaction between buyers (demand) and sellers (supply). Bottoms form in different ways, but if you learn to read the price action the way I've explained, you will be able to determine when that is happened. Whether you trade stocks, commodities, currencies or the market indices learn to read the price action, not indicators that attempt to read the price action for you. All the best, Greg Capra President & CEO Pristine Capital Holdings, Inc.
  24. This stock isn't going to be the next big mover like Apple (AAPL) was in its hay-day, but it has formed a bottom and signaled the start of a move higher last week. Bottoming formations take time and typically have multiple retests of prior lows, breakdown failures (BDF) and false starts. One signal that has had a high degree of not being a false start coming out of a base is the Bullish Wide Range Bar (+WRB) on increasing volume. After falling lower with virtually no bounces at all in 2011, Corning Inc. (GLW) began to form a bottom. Like most bottoming formations GLW had its retests, failed attempts to move higher, (none ever cleared any prior highs) and a breakdown failure that was retested. Notice after the move up from that retest GLW based sideways at resistance. Pristine Tip: Basing at resistance after a move up signals buyers absorbing the supply and bullish. Last week, GLW formed a +WRB with increasing volume and closed above its recent resistance area. Look further to the left and you will see other large green candles, some even with an increase in volume, but none of them cleared prior highs. Those prior highs still have to be overcome; however, the price action that has occurred after them suggests that is going to happen. By putting together the parts of the overall price action that has occurred we have the making of a bottom and bullish signal. I could have put a few indicators on the chart to show you how they are becoming bullish and signaling a move higher also. Most likely would create a belief in those indicators as a reliable way of determining a bottom. In time, you would be moving on to the next indicator someone else used. This is the cycle most go through forever and never understand how to read the interaction between buyers (demand) and sellers (supply). Bottoms form in different ways, but if you learn to read the price action the way I've explained, you will be able to determine when that is happened. Whether you trade stocks, commodities, currencies or the market indices learn to read the price action, not indicators that attempt to read the price action for you. Greg Capra President & CEO Pristine Capital Holdings, Inc.
  25. Stocks continued to sell off on Thursday, with tech stocks getting hit the hardest. The Nasdaq Composite sold off 1.2%, while most averages closed lower by 0.6% to 0.7%. The Nasdaq sliced through key intermediate-term support of its 50-day moving average, joining the Russell 2000 and S&P Midcap 400. The S&P 500 closed just below (but not a decisive break of) its 50-day moving average yesterday, after undercutting its prior “swing lows” at the 1538-1539 support level: The 50-day moving average is a very important support level during a rally, as it is basically the line in the sand for the bulls. When the major averages all break below the 50-day MA within a few days of each other, it is usually a good time to raise cash and sit on the sidelines. The evidence below suggests that the market is now in a corrective phase, which forces our rule-based timing model into “sell” mode: There are at least 5-6 distribution days in the market (strike 1). Most of the main stock market indexes are trading below the 50-day MA (strike 2). We do not count the Dow. Leading individual stocks are beginning to break down below key support levels (strike 3). How long will a stock market correction last? No one knows, but there is one main clue to watch out for. Can leading stocks that have recently broken down find support and stabilize? There is a big difference between leading stocks pulling back 15-20% off a swing high versus completely breaking down and selling off 40% or more from their highs. If most stocks hold above or around their 50-day MAs and fall no more than 20-25% or so off their swing highs, then we would expect any correction in the S&P 500 to be limited to around 4-6%. US Natural Gas Fund ($UNG), a current holding in the model portfolio of The Wagner Daily, is in pretty good shape after yesterday’s (April 18) strong advance. The weekly chart below shows $UNG zooming above the breakout pivot, which is always a bullish sign: As annotated on the chart above, $UNG is holding support of a steep uptrend line (black dotted line), while the 10-week MA (teal line) is beginning to pull away from the 40-week MA (orange line) after the bullish crossover a few weeks ago. One great thing about $UNG is that it has a low correlation to the direction of the overall stock market because it is a commodity ETF. As you may recall, our actual swing trade buy entry into $UNG was based on the “cup and handle” chart pattern we originally pointed out in this April 2 post on our trading blog. Presently, $UNG is showing an unrealized gain of 6% since our April 8 buy entry, and is well positioned to continue higher in the near-term. In addition to $UNG, we also continue to hold Market Vectors Semiconductor ETF ($SMH). Presently, this ETF is holding above its prior swing low, but is struggling to reclaim its 50-day MA. Nevertheless, based on our March 28 technical analysis of the semiconductor sector, we are still bullish on the intermediate-term bias of $SMH. Alongside of $UNG and $SMH, our model portfolio is still long two individual stocks (bought when our timing model was in “buy” mode): Celldex Therapeutics ($CLDX) and LinkedIn ($LNKD). Despite yesterday’s decline in the broad market, $CLDX broke out to a fresh all-time high and is currently showing an unrealized gain of 8.9% since our April 9 buy entry. The daily chart of $CLDX below shows our recent breakout entry point: Our other individual stock holding, $LNKD, is roughly break-even since our swing trade entry point. However, we do not mind holding this A-rated stock through a corrective phase in the broad market, just as long as our stop is not triggered. If the price action can remain above the 10-week MA, then we may be able to hold through earnings in early May and potentially catch the next big wave up. As detailed in this article that explains our strategy for trading around earnings reports, we previously netted a handsome gain of 22% trading $LNKD before and after its January 2013 earnings report.
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