Key Concepts for Reading Stock Charts
Stockscores Foundation for the week ending September 5, 2017
In this week's issue:
In This Week’s Issue:
- Stockscores Tour Webinar tonight
- Stockscores at the Toronto Money Show
- Stockscores’ Market Minutes Video – Maximizing Trading Profits
- Stockscores Trader Training – Key Concepts for Reading Stock Charts
- Stock Features of the Week – Stockscores Simple Weekly Under $10
Stockscores Tour Webinar
The new Stockscores website has launched and I am doing a tour of the site via webinar tonight. This is a free event, starts at 6pm PT and will go for about an hour. I will show the new charts and how to use the tools of Stockscores. Most importantly, we will do some Market Scans and see if we can find some good trading opportunities.
Click here to register
Stockscores at the Toronto Money Show
I will be doing two presentations at the Toronto Money Show in September, one free and the other a Master Class that you can purchase. For more information on these two presentations, click here.
Stockscores Market Minutes – Maximizing Trading Profits
There are two ways to look at maximizing your trading profits. This week I explain, do my market analysis and look at the trade of the week on GILD.
Click Here to Watch
To get instant updates when I upload a new video, subscribe to the Stockscores YouTube Channel
Trader Training – Key Concepts for Reading Stock Charts
During tonight’s webinar, I will do Market Scans in search of trading opportunities. With that in mind, I thought it was a good time to review some of the key concepts in reading chart patterns.
Stock charts tell me everything that I need to know to do my analysis. They tell me how people feel about a stock, whether there are good things happening within the company's business, how the economy is affecting the company and, most importantly, what the potential for price change is.
Here are some simple rules of chart reading that I think anyone analyzing charts should keep in mind.
Prices That Fall in to Support Will Bounce at Support
Support and resistance are important concepts of chart analysis. Support is a floor price that has been formed by the market over time, it is a low price point where the price trend stopped going down and started to go up. Chart readers look for breaks through support as a signal that a down trend is beginning.
However, that is not always the case. If a stock's price is falling day after day, it is likely to bounce around support but it may go through support temporarily. Therefore, don't short breaks through support if the break comes after a number of days of downward price movement. Prices in free fall will usually bounce around support.
Prices that Consolidate Before Breaking Support Will Trend Lower
Here is how to apply the sell on a break of support rule. If prices are trending sideways with relatively low volatility at or near an area of price support and then make a downward move through support, the stock is likely going in to a downward trend. The difference here is that the downtrend is just starting with an initial break through support.
You can reverse these rules for resistance and upside breakouts as well.
Breakouts From Low Price Volatility are Reliable
What does it mean when stocks trend sideways with very little price volatility? It is more than just a boring chart, it means that buyers and sellers agree about what the stock is worth. It is a display of confidence in the value given to the stock.
Therefore, if the stock price breaks from this period of confidence, it implies that there is new information that justifies the price move. This usually comes in the early stages of a trend; as more investors learn about the new information, more people will jump in to the stock and carry it farther along its trend.
This means that identifying breaks from low price volatility is an important way to catch market beating trends early.
Prices That Run Away From the Trend Line Come Back to the Trendline
In the long term, prices tend to trend in a linear fashion. That means you can draw a straight line across the bottoms of an up trend or a straight line across the tops of a down trend.
However, along the way, prices will often move away from this straight line. This happens because investors get emotional and either chase the stock higher with greed or force the stock quickly lower with fear.
The emotion eventually comes out of the market, bringing the stock back to that linear, straight trend line.
This means that we should be aware of a short term price reversal the farther prices get from the linear trend line. A stock that runs away to the upside will eventually come down on a pull back. Prices that fall too quickly will eventually come up.
This rule works best with up trends, which tend to be more orderly and longer lasting than down trends.
All Available Information Is Shown In the Chart
Traditional investors who have heard me talk about the markets often shake their heads when they hear that I do not do any research in to what the company does before I buy a stock. They find it hard to believe that I can make money trading nothing more than the chart.
The chart of price change shows us every bit of fundamental information that is known by the market. Since most investors are acting on information to make their decisions, reading a chart is essentially reading their perceptions of the information that they have. A company that is doing well within their business will have a good looking chart because investors are pricing in the positive new information.
Falling Tops Are a Sign That Investors Are Pessimistic
If investors believe that there is something wrong with a company's ability to make money in the future, they will drive prices lower over time. This pessimism is best seen visually in a chart by looking for falling tops. The falling tops on the chart show that every time the buyers are able to push prices up, they are unable to push prices as high as they had the previous time. That is a sign that the sellers are in control of the market.
Rising Bottoms Are a Sign That Investors Are Optimistic
Conversely, if the bottoms are rising on the chart, investors are optimistic and the buyers are in control. Each time the sellers are able to push prices down, they are unable to push them down as much as they had the previous time.
It is best to only buy stocks that are in the buyers' control.
Up Trends Start Slowly
A stock that has been an under or non-performer will have investor's doubt any time it shows some strength. Investors tend to judge a stock by what has happened in the past rather than what they expect for the future. The result is that stocks that are starting upward trends tend to do so slowly because investors doubt that the company deserves to go higher.
This means you have to be patient with up trends that are in their early stages as they will often have false starts. Doubting investors who own the stock will sell in to strength, not realizing that the company's future is brighter than it has been.
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This week, I ran the Stockscores Simple Weekly Market Scans which are available to Investor and Active Trader members and I modified the scan to focus on stocks under $10. I look for weekly breaks from a predictive chart pattern, which typically is a break through resistance from low price volatility. Here are a three that look promising:
1. T.NGDT.NGD is like most Gold stocks right now, breaking a downward trend after a lengthy period of underperformance. It made its break last week and is getting follow through today. Support at $4.30.
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2. V.GUGV.GUG has doubled in the past few days on strong volume but looks like it has more room to run. I like it better if it can pull back first. Support at $0.07.
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3. ABCDA very nice Ascending Triangle break out on the 3 year weekly chart for ABCD, support at $5.
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