Timing Stock Indicators
Topics
- Timing Indicators
- 3 Day Candlestick
- Accumulation & Distribution
- Moneyflow
- Breakout
- Breakdown
Timing Indicators
- A stocks short term bullish and bearish indicators.
- Help decide when to enter or exit a stock position.
3 Day Candlestick
- The 3-day candlestick indicator analyzes over 120 candlestick patterns.
- Is best used for determining the start of stock rallies and pullbacks and for judging the current health.
- Patterns ranked as neutral (0), mild bullish (+5) and bearish (-5), strong bullish (10) and bearish (-10)
Accumulation & Distribution
- Volume analysis is done over the past 3 days and labelled as neutral, accumulation (bullish), or distribution (bearish) with strength from 0 (neutral) to 10 (extreme) levels.
- Strong stock accumulation or distribution may enhance the credibility of the bullish or bearish 3-day candlestick pattern.
- Good to strong accumulation at the start of a rally or breakout may help the odds of a follow-through.
- Extreme Accumulation (9-10) at stock bottoms (either short-term or intermediate) indicates a reversal area.
- Extreme Distribution (9-10) at stock tops (either short-term or intermediate) indicates a reversal area.
- Extreme Neutral Accumulation or Distribution (9-10) is a stalemate between bulls and bears.
Moneyflow
- Moneyflow is a short-term 1-day indicator comparing the current day to past days.
- Is neutral, bullish, or bearish with a strength of 1 (lite) to 10 (extreme).
- The end of a rally or pullback (short-term direction indicator) may be marked by extreme 1 day moneyflow (or high volume) that is either neutral, bullish, or bearish.
Breakout
- Explosive upside price movement occurs above the breakout level.
- Breakout levels mark the edge of an upside price gap, resistance gap, or no resistance.
- Types of Breakouts include bottom, narrow price range and top of price range.
- More detailed breakout information can be found at Upside Trade Help Page
Breakdown
- Explosive downside price movement occurs below the breakdown level.
- Breakdown levels mark the edge of a downside price gap, support gap, or no support.
- Breakdown types include top, narrow price range and bottom of price range.
- More detailed breakdown information can be found at Downside Trade Help Page
Disclaimer: This is NOT investment advice, just general help and opinions. Please check with a registered investment
advisor before making any investment decisions. This
document may contain errors. Chapman Advisory Group LLC employees are not investment advisors. Please review:
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