gauging imminent breakouts
This one's not so hard. It's the idea behind my entire approach, as presented in my "manifesto."
You're looking for a stock that is approaching, or has just met, some previous high point -- the best is if that high point is a previous all-time high for that stock. You want to see that the technical indicators are building strength as the stock price has approached that previous high point. You want to see in those indicators that there is still room for even further strength, enough to push the stock price upward past that previous high. Remember what "resistance" is -- the more volume that was transacted in that stock as it turned down from that previous high point gives you the basis for gauging the strength of that point as resistance. That volume is telling you how many previous buyers will have the incentive to SELL when the stock attains that previous high price again.
Of course, if you have independent knowledge that the company's operations are continuing to improve versus the time when it made that previous high point, that future earnings guidance indicates company growth, there is a reasonable P/E ration and PEG ratio, that revs and margins are strong and improving -- all these things give you corroboration that there will be strength in the market to push the stock price beyond the previous high point. Then, after it has done so, there are that many FEWER previous owners who will be willing to sell their shares as the price continues to rise. If the stock surpasses a previous all-time high, you are now in BLUE SKY TERRITORY, absolutely the best place to be for a stock's price.
This one's not so hard. It's the idea behind my entire approach, as presented in my "manifesto."
You're looking for a stock that is approaching, or has just met, some previous high point -- the best is if that high point is a previous all-time high for that stock. You want to see that the technical indicators are building strength as the stock price has approached that previous high point. You want to see in those indicators that there is still room for even further strength, enough to push the stock price upward past that previous high. Remember what "resistance" is -- the more volume that was transacted in that stock as it turned down from that previous high point gives you the basis for gauging the strength of that point as resistance. That volume is telling you how many previous buyers will have the incentive to SELL when the stock attains that previous high price again.
Of course, if you have independent knowledge that the company's operations are continuing to improve versus the time when it made that previous high point, that future earnings guidance indicates company growth, there is a reasonable P/E ration and PEG ratio, that revs and margins are strong and improving -- all these things give you corroboration that there will be strength in the market to push the stock price beyond the previous high point. Then, after it has done so, there are that many FEWER previous owners who will be willing to sell their shares as the price continues to rise. If the stock surpasses a previous all-time high, you are now in BLUE SKY TERRITORY, absolutely the best place to be for a stock's price.
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