I will start off with my Idea #1. When SP-500 drops below the 50-Day EMA. Look at the history.

https://schrts.co/xpHxjikJ
Moderator: Aitrus
Blame that on the crazy market these days. If we ever get back to longer trends this would make-out like gamebusters.
Sometimes that's the best you can ask for.
I do too. How did you determine the PSAR (aka Parabolic Stop and Reverse) parameters, which are not the defaults (0.02,0.2)? Also, how are you making use of MA(5) and MA(10)?
144, can you give your interpretation of what was going on (with your chart) the first 2 wks of Aug.12squared wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 6:01 pm Here's my current favorite.
https://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24BP ... 2734535327
Tomany, this one is my favorite for buying but not for selling. For a buying strategy I recommend having both the 50 EMA and 50 SMA on the Daily chart. There appears to be an important interplay between the 50 EMA and 50 SMA and it is a leading indicator in Bear markets (not Bull markets). In a Bear Market the EMA is typically sloping downwards and then falls below the 50 SMA. But periodically in a Bear market the 50 EMA will cross above the 50 SMA (bull cross) indicating that there is about to be a short-term rally (1 week to several weeks). Wait for it to cross and then buy. This way you avoid the head fakes of Sept 9 and Oct 28. Previous crosses were on March 21 and June 30. It crossed again on late Nov 2/early Nov 3 - so those days would have been good days to buy. The reverse does not work - the 50 EMA crossing below the 50 SMA is a lagging indicator for selling. Tell me if you see the same. Now if I Jatelle could just follow my own rule...Tomanyiron wrote: ↑Wed Nov 16, 2022 5:26 am
I will start off with my Idea #1. When SP-500 drops below the 50-Day EMA. Look at the history.
You're very welcome Tomany! March would be a wash only if you use this strategy for selling. I only use this strategy for buying in a Bear Market. For selling in a Bear market I draw a trendline between entry day low and low of the first major pullback. If price drops below that trend line - I sell then or on the next bounce up (failed follow) - odds are that it will flush after that. On the rare occasion you might miss out on a last gasp surge but they almost never last. My goal is just to sell near the high not at the perfect high. So for March: it crossed at premarket on 23rd. So IFT by noon on March 23 (closing price 444). It broke below the trendline mid afternoon March 31st so then IFT by noon on April 1 (closing price 453) - only a 2% gain in 1 week but better than G. Alternatively, one could stay in for one more day hoping for a juicy bounce day (failed follow) on April 4 for that extra 3/4% but it is riskier because it might peak in the morning and then crash in the late afternoon. Does that make sense? See if it tests out for you.Tomanyiron wrote: ↑Fri Nov 18, 2022 10:03 am Thanks jatelle, I did a modification. I like what it did in June. But with the IFT delay the one in March was a wash.
https://schrts.co/AvmUtPfu![]()
Good questions. I trade with TD Ameritrade and have learned a lot from their free technical analysis webinars and online resources. You can find much of their TD Technical Analysis on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=P ... _Fg3mcem2G
Fund | Price | Day | YTD |
G | $17.40 | 0.01% | 0.96% |
F | $18.69 | 0.19% | 2.67% |
C | $62.41 | 0.58% | 5.96% |
S | $63.80 | 0.28% | 3.68% |
I | $36.69 | 1.26% | 8.11% |
L2065 | $13.05 | 0.77% | 6.41% |
L2060 | $13.05 | 0.77% | 6.41% |
L2055 | $13.05 | 0.77% | 6.41% |
L2050 | $26.93 | 0.65% | 5.60% |
L2045 | $12.38 | 0.62% | 5.33% |
L2040 | $45.57 | 0.58% | 5.06% |
L2035 | $12.14 | 0.53% | 4.74% |
L2030 | $40.80 | 0.49% | 4.40% |
L2025 | $11.79 | 0.32% | 3.21% |
Linc | $23.41 | 0.21% | 2.43% |