SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Technical analysis for shorts & longs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (37791)7/24/2002 10:02:59 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 67928
 
Investor's Corner
Wednesday, July 24, 2002

What Readers Are Saying About Investor's Corner
Printer-Ready
Version
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
E-mail this Article
to a Friend


Why Do Bases Work? Hope, Fear And Greed
BY JONAH KERI

INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY


Fear of the unknown can be your biggest foe as an investor. Especially when it comes to stock charts and bases.

You may dismiss charts as quickly as you do palm reading. All those lines and shapes — who needs them? And what's a base, anyway? Too esoteric, too random, too voodoo for you.

It's time to conquer your fear. Why? Because bases work. Always have, always will.

Stocks form bases in step with the flow of the market. Even the best stocks can't go up forever. When the market tumbles, leading stocks carve bases.

Bases play heavily on investor psychology. A base starts when a stock begins to correct off its high. At that point, sellers are taking advantage of investor greed. A stock may be far extended from its prior base, but ravenous buyers are still willing to nab shares.

As a good base completes its left side, it often finds support at a key level like the 50- or 200-day moving average. That's where money managers swoop in and buy. They're taking advantage of investor fear as panicky traders sell.

Whether forming a cup-with-handle, double-bottom or other pattern, a properly behaving stock will then start to climb. Investors rekindle their optimism as a stock forms the base's right side.

In its final phase, a base will include a shakeout to knock the last weak holders out. Often expressed as a handle shape, the stock will drift downward, thanks to impatient investors sick of waiting for the big move.

Once those antsy folks have left, a stock is free to break out of its base, surging on huge volume as institutions jump in and buy.

Of course, it's one thing to say all these things will happen. It's another to let the greatest stock runs in history do the talking.

You'll find thousands of stocks that have formed sound bases before launching their big moves. No matter how far back you go, the same principles apply.

Let's go back almost 40 years to the start of Xerox's (XRX) huge run. The copy machine maker ran up to a high of 164.50 in January 1963. After a strong prior move, it needed time to digest its gains. Xerox corrected for 2 1/2 weeks as investors took profits (see point 1 on accompanying image).

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The stock found a bottom, then moved higher as buyers stepped in (point 2). On March 14 of that year, Xerox came within 0.37 of matching its high, then settled into a downward-sloping handle (point 3).

On April 3, the stock zoomed out of its base on a massive surge in volume (point 4). Xerox went on to triple in the next three years.