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DAILY STOCK TIPS |
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Daily Stock Tips and Stock Picks Brought To You
Before The Market Opens
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Daily Stock Tips Free Report #6: Technical Analysis Tools That "Daily Stock Picks" Employs There are two schools of thought when it comes to analyzing and selecting stocks: the fundamental and technical. The majority of research produced by brokerage firms and institutional investors such as mutual and pension funds focuses on "fundamentals." A company’s fundamentals include things like its revenues, its profit margin, how much cash it has in the bank, how much debt it has, what is its cash flow, what are its earnings this year, how does that compare to last year, and most importantly what are its projected earnings for next year and the year after. Fundamental analysts argue that the quality of the underlying company ultimately determines the price of its stock. Fundamental research may be helpful in determining the long term (one, two, three or more years) direction of a stock but is virtually useless for timing a stock’s short term price swings. There are many many many cases where a company’s profits were going steadily higher even as the price of its stock dropped just as steadily. Investors devoted to fundamental research for their stock selections, usually advocate the "buy and hold" approach to investing. But as we have illustrated in some detail in another report (The Really Big Advantages of Swing Trading versus Buy and Hold), shorter term "swing" trading has a documented record of significantly outperforming the "buy and hold strategy." Short term trading however requires different tools that are much more time sensitive. Short term traders buy and hold stocks for only a few days or weeks, but certainly not years. Short term traders must employ technical analysis to time their trades. Technical analysis uses only price and volume. Current prices reflect what information is known about a particular stock at a particular time. History shows that price patterns tend to repeat themselves time after time, day after day, week after week, month after month, and year after year. This fact of life forms the basis for "charting" the cornerstone of technical analysis. Charting is simply the representation of prices drawn on paper or your computer screen. Every day, a straight vertical line is drawn connecting the high and low prices for that day with a dash to the right of that line showing the closing price. A series of these "bars" trace out patterns. Since these patterns tend to repeat, a technical trader simply watches for a repeating pattern. Here at Daily Stock Picks chart patterns are one of our primary inputs to selecting stocks. While there are many books with literally hundreds of patterns discussed in exquisite boring detail, we find that all those variations are very confusing, and frankly not very helpful. In fact trying to watch too many things can be harmful to a short-term trader. Remember we are only looking for a move of a few days and don’t plan to hold a stock for years. We focus on only a handful of highly reliable patterns. One of the most important is a chart "gap." A gap forms on a chart when today’s low is higher than yesterday’s high. Gaps are good indicators of strong underlying demand for a stock. They are buy signals. Another reliable buy signal occurs with an "outside day." An outside day is when today’s high is higher than yesterday’s high, AND today’s low is lower than yesterday’s low, AND today’s closing price is above yesterday’s high price. It is also a strong buy signal. Another buy signal to watch for is when a stock closes at a new high price. For example, if you note that today’s closing price is higher than any closing price for the past week or month, that is a potential buy signal. The longer the time period, the stronger the buy signal. A new monthly high is a stronger buy signal than a new weekly high. The explanation is simple: for some reason big investors are suddenly willing to pay more for a stock than they were only a week or month ago. Stock movements are driven by big investors who have huge amounts of money and great information. An individual trader may not have all the advantages of an institutional trader moving millions of dollars around, but that big money trader will leave tracks that you can follow. The most reliable chart pattern occurs when prices have been going sideways in a relatively narrow range (e.g., $3 to $6 from low to high for a week or more). When one day the price closes above the highest price of the sideways pattern, that is a strong buy signal. Once again, the longer the sideways time period the stronger the signal, when it closes out of the trading range. If you look at very many stock charts (we recommend the website www.bigcharts.com), you’ll notice that these patterns occur with some regularity. But of course they are not all profitable signals. To sort out which signals are better than others, we watch volume very carefully. Volume is the total number of shares of stock traded each day. On most charts it is plotted below the price bars so that you can easily see if it is going up or down with the price. If volume increases when you get one of the signals we outline above, it is a stronger signal. In other words, the volume "confirms" the price action. However, if you see a gap up on a stock, but volume that day actually declines, that cancels the buy signal. Technical analysts believe that volume leads price. Price moves without volume confirmation are not considered valid. One other thing that we consider very carefully in making any stock selection is the closing price. The closing price each day is the most important price of the day. The closing price is the price that the professional floor traders feel comfortable taking home. So it pays to watch where a stock’s price closes in relation to the day’s high to low range. For example, if you are looking to buy a stock, you want to see the closing price in the upper half of the day’s range. The nearer the closing price is to the high of the day, the stronger the buy signal. As with volume, use the closing price’s position to confirm or cancel a signal. For example, if the price gaps up, AND volume increases, you have a buy signal and one confirmation. If the closing price is near the high of the day, then you have a second confirmation and a stronger buy signal. Conservative traders will wait for all three to fall in line to buy. More aggressive traders may act with the buy signal and one confirmation, but only buy half as many shares as usual. For example, if you usually buy 500 shares every time you trade, then with a single confirmation signal you would only buy 250 shares. So with only four chart patterns, analysis of volume, and where the price closes relative to the high and low price range for the day, you can significantly increase your odds of success when trading short term. Tech Stocks: How to Pick Tomorrow's Big Winners The gigantic stock market
rise and subsequent collapse of the 1990s was largely a phenomenon of
technology stocks. Analysts who should have known better proclaimed that a
"new economy" driven by rapidly advancing technology outdated old measures
of value like cash flow, profitability, management experience, and
financial statistics. In fact the height of the bubble, jokes were made
about the dangers of buying stocks that actually made money! Why they were
prime examples of the "old economy" and should be avoided. The following areas are
ones that our research suggest offer great opportunities. Click Here For Daily Stock Picks Information
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