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Strategies & Market Trends : MDA - Market Direction Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: HairBall who wrote (5361)2/3/1999 8:46:00 PM
From: Gersh Avery  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 99985
 
LG Re trin

I've noticed that the movement of the market seems to take place in line with the slope of the trin on a chart rather than where it is in relation to one.

In other words if the trin is trending up then the market is trending down. When it reverses the market reverses shortly after. Many times I've seen where the trin is setting at ~.80 and the market is drifting lower. That usually takes place when the tick is negative at the same time.

When the tick and the trin work together you get quick, large movements.

Bottom line .. look at the slope of the trin intraday chart .. it points the way.

Gersh



To: HairBall who wrote (5361)2/3/1999 9:06:00 PM
From: Lee Lichterman III  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 99985
 
Is it my imagination or are there a lot of stocks down and broken through support lines today despite the indexes being up? Maybe I am just charting ALL the wrong stocks. Just finished my first rn through the charts and I have a lot of broken trend lines tonight.

Lee



To: HairBall who wrote (5361)2/3/1999 11:21:00 PM
From: StockOperator  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99985
 
Like I said in my earlier post there are plenty of clues left on the charts that are indicating higher prices. The NAZ and S&P closing at their highs for the month of Jan. were just two. The fact that all the major indexes closed higher for the month of Jan. was another. And although the price action of the other indexes have been very choppy lately, it is to be expected when prices are attempting to break out of consolidation pattern. IMO, its the analysis of price and time, with more emphasis paid on weekly and monthly closes that can greatly improve one's analysis of trend. But which trend are we talking about? The DOW losing 120 pts because it bounced off resistance within a tight range. Or, the impact of the 173 pt intraday move in the trannies last week to their overall trend. Should we interpret that day with any significants? The trend comes in many forms. Daily charts build into weekly which turn monthly which becomes the basis for the long term. Its correctly analyzing those long term trends that will add the most 0000's to your brokerage account. The fact that the NAZ and S&P closed at or very near their highs two months in a row should be a good indication that this bull will not die that easily. That move in the trannies was significant in that it broke through overhead resistance established during the past couple of months. But yet the move was stopped dead in its tracks because it ran right into more resistance at higher prices. A look at the daily chart says that we could get a push to higher levels the next couple of days. The DOW is also setting itself up for a breakout. A close on Friday anywhere north of the close today would be very bullish. What about the charts of the big players that make up those avgs. AT&T had a huge day with the highest closing on a daily basis. CMB closed at new highs today hitting $80 for the first time. Banks obviously happy with AG. Stocks to watch closely would be IBM, MO, MRK, JNJ and most of the airlines stocks. Most of these stocks are hanging on to support or attempting to break key resistance levels. Can anyone say internet rally? Some of the stocks made nice moves today. However they have not broken out yet and many are at make or break positions on their charts. AMZN, YHOO, ONSL, BAMM, CYCH, CYSP, AMEN, CNKT and the rest should either break up or down this month. Perhaps NAVR which closed at a daily high of $20 is giving us clues to which direction these stocks will be going.

This is without a doubt a critical point in some of the avgs. The trading of the next two days will set the stage for a possible breakout for the lagging indexes. Watch to see if the market can add onto the gains of today.

All the great analysis of the past couple of weeks should be put to the test here. IMO, being bullish or bearish has the greatest consequences during the next couple of weeks.

Good luck trading.

SO



To: HairBall who wrote (5361)2/4/1999 1:43:00 AM
From: Stephen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99985
 
LG, I use the 10 day trin only because Decision Point says its the one most commonly used. IMHO, part of the reason TA works is because the big boys use it (somewhat self-fulfilling) so I like to be on the same page !!.

In a strong market, for use as a reliable intraday (long) indicator, I like the trin to be trending below -65. If it is much below -55, and the tick turns negative it usually means the selling pressure is minimal and its an opportunity to buy. I only use it for the general market, along with the index support/resistance levels, and use short term fundamentals (these days, often news, as it seems to be an event driven market) for individual stocks. It sounds like Gersh might be able to enlighten us on how best it might be applied for use with individual stocks.

I should add, I keep only short term positions these days, and don't even have an investment portfolio. Despite the tax implications, I sleep better (GG)

Regards

Stephen