Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Low Volume and Volatility

Another week of bullish trading and indexes (S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 and DJI) have climbed close to their January 2010 highs. In my "Money Flow" post on March 1, 2010 I wrote "I would say that results of my technical analysis are still Bullish and I see good odds of market moving higher. On the other hand, there is a possibility of volatile side-way trading in the same range the stock market is now". This exactly what happened this week - three day of flat, side-way trading and then up-move to the January's highs.

On January 31, 2010 in my "Technical Analysis" post I have talked about coming reversal and on February 4 and 7, 2010 in "NYSE Advance/Decline" and "S&P 500 Chart" I confirmed that the market hit the bottom. In one of my posts I mentioned that at that time the market was strongly oversold and it had power to climb back to the November-December 2009 flat levels and then to the January 2010 highs.

As a rule, when I look at the longer-term charts, I'm not trying to where the market is going to be in a month or two. When a trader (technical analyst) is trying to say where the market is going to be in a month he/she could run into situation when he or she can become relaxed and miss some important and critical events. I look at charts every day (during the trading session and after the market close). When I look at longer-term charts I have made a habit do not analyze where the market /indexes or stock could be in a month but rather say how strongly overbought or oversold market is and what is currently moving longer-term trend. I'm not stating that everybody has to do it, yet on my own experience I found that this is the best way to come to the longer-term charts and longer-term trends.

When somebody tells you that his technical analysis results tell him that the Dow Jones Industrials (

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