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How To Spot The Best Breakout/Breakdown Candidates
Gary Kaltbaum My main focus here is to try to isolate my favorite types of setups. Every big move, up or down, starts the same way... (more)
TM Tools For Identifying The Top Intermediate-Term Setups
Daniel Beighley This lesson walks you through the process of trade selection using the plethora of proprietary lists and tools available on our site. (more)
Using Institutional Money Flows To Identify The New Leaders
Daniel P. Delaney The amount of
information on the Net will no doubt keep increasing, so it pays to stay up to
date with all the tools you have at your fingertips. (more)
My Favorite Strategies For Gaps Up And Gaps Down
Gary Kaltbaum When a stock gaps up or down, I believe this is the most significant sign of accumulation or distribution.
(more)
Five Ways To Improve Reliability And Profitability Of Breakouts
Mark Boucher This month, we'll cover five technical tools that our research shows help
increase the reliability of a breakout moving in the intended direction. (more)
The Five Traits Of Flat Bases That Explode
Loren Fleckenstein Some of the most explosive share price
advances launch from tight, range-bound structures rather than deep
correction-recovery patterns such as the cup-with-handle. (more)
How To Find Ascending Bases That Lead To Powerful Advances
Loren Fleckenstein In a choppy market, leadership stocks
sometimes act like runners on base. The player leads off, is forced back when the pitcher throws to first, then steals second and
leads off again. When the next batter up blasts one for the fences, the man at
second explodes, rounding third base, then slides home. (more)
Characteristics Traders Should Look For In Double-Bottom Bases
Loren Fleckenstein One trick to buying off
correction-recovery patterns is spotting the point where new buyers have
overcome the so-called weak holders. Long, flat bases wear out the weak holders.
Cup-with-handle bases scare and wear them out. Double-bottom bases lull the weak
holders into optimism, then take them out and shoot them. (more)
Using Weekly Charts To Detect Stealth Buying
Loren Fleckenstein Pretend that you run a mutual fund with $1 billion in assets. You want to put just
1% of that money to work in the stock of a publicly traded company. That amounts to
$10 million worth of stock. (more)
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