FAP Turbo

Make Over 90% Winning Trades Now!

Monday, August 17, 2009

Richie Rich Trader Breaks Silence and Reveals His Best Indicator

By Shawn Tilman

Are you ready to learn a sure-fire system for generating quick and easy cash flow from the stock market?

This money pulling indicator is used by billion dollar hedge fund traders like Steve Cohen who's firm has average over 40% a year!

Over 50 stock traders work for him. He is a guru of following a stock's volume.

Most non-professional traders either overlook volume, or simply do not know how to use it correctly.

This article and lesson is about how to READ volume correctly. Don't be arrogant. Even if you think you know everything there is to know about volume, you owe it to yourself to read this article and make sure you know how to use volume to super-charge your stock market profits.

Each measured unit of volume represents the meeting of minds between two individuals: a buyer and a seller. Volume measures shares or contracts that have changed hands. Volume is most commonly shown as a histogram bar below the stock price. Volume reveals clues about the psychology of bulls and bears. Rising volume confirms trends while falling volume means you should question the longevity of the existing trend.

In a sell off, increasing volume into the move tells you that panic has firmly settled in as traders scramble for the exit. If you look carefully, you'll also see newbies jumping in as they bet the market is going to reverse. Keep in mind that in order for a sell order to execute, someone has to be a buyer. Every trade has these two sides. Jumping in to buy in a downtrend is known as trying to catch a falling knife. Most often it is a bad idea. Never bet against the wisdom of the crowd. Let some other newbie put on that trade. When all the sellers have exited the stock, the volume on the downside falls off as the downward move begins to run out of steam.

During an uptrend, look for rising volume. Rising volume in an uptrend means that greed has firmly gripped the crowd that is trading the stock. More and more greedy traders will dog pile into the stock. Selling into an uptrend should only be done if your profit thesis has been fulfilled. When fear begins to replace the greed, the volume on the upside begins to fall as the upward move runs out of steam.

Volume gives you useful clues in addition to telling you the conviction of a given trend.

A one-day splash of uncommonly high volume often marks the beginning of a trend when it accompanies a breakout from a trading range. A similar splash tends to mark the end of a trend if it occurs during a well established move. Exceedingly high volume, three or more times above average, identifies market hysteria. That is when nervous bulls finally decide that the uptrend is for real and rush in to buy or nervous bears become convinced that the decline has no bottom and jump in to sell short.

When price and volume diverge the stock is usually at a turning point.

When prices rise to a new high but volume falls, it shows that the uptrend attracts less interest. When prices fall to a new low and volume falls, it shows that lower prices attract little interest and an upside reversal is likely. Price is more important than volume, but good traders always analyze volume to gauge the psychology of the crowd. - 23204

About the Author:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home