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10+1 Rules If You USE Charts

Rule 1 – If you cannot see trends and patterns almost instantly when you look at a chart then they are not there. The longer you stare, the more your brain will try to apply order where there is none.

If you have to justify exceptions, stray data points and conflicting evidence then it is safe to say the market is not showing you what you think it is.

Rule 2 – If you cannot figure out if something is bullish or bearish after three indicators then move on. The more studies you apply to any chart the more likely one of them will say “something.” That something is probably not correct.

When I look at a chart and cannot form an opinion after applying three or four different types of indicators – volume, momentum, trend, even Fibonacci – I  must conclude that the market has not decided what it wants to do at that time. Who am I to tell it what it thinks?

Rule 3 – You can torture a chart to say anything you want. Don’t do it.

This is very similar to Rule 2 but it there is an important point to drive home. You can cherry pick indicators to justify whatever biases you bring to the table and that attempts to impose your will on the market. You cannot tell the market what to do – ever. (more…)

What to Monitor During a Correction

  • Bull market correctionReversed for bear market correction.
    • Support below
    • Fibonacci retracement levels of prior uptrend
    • Bottoming price action
    • Positive divergence — index vs. indicators
    • Positive divergence — index vs. internals
    • Bullish candlestick pattern or western reversal bar
    • Notable change in scan hits
    • Break of resistance (downward sloping) trendline

Classifying Bull Market Declines

  • 1 to 3% – Market pullback
  • 3 to 5% – Minor correction
  • 5 to 8% – Standard correction
  • 8 to 12% – Deep correction
  • 12 to 16% – Very deep correction
  • 16 to 20% – Minor bear market
  • More than 20% – Bear market
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