From: owner-canslim-digest@lists.xmission.com (canslim-digest) To: canslim-digest@lists.xmission.com Subject: canslim-digest V2 #1316 Reply-To: canslim Sender: owner-canslim-digest@lists.xmission.com Errors-To: owner-canslim-digest@lists.xmission.com Precedence: bulk Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-No-Archive: yes canslim-digest Wednesday, April 25 2001 Volume 02 : Number 1316 In this issue: Re: [CANSLIM] ADVP anyone? Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings [CANSLIM] Investor's Corner Is Free on investors.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 18:12:20 -0400 From: "Tom Worley" Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] ADVP anyone? Looks to me like it is trying to follow a pattern of "base on base". As long as you bot in a base, and were patient, you made money. Right now, it appears to be in a consolidation of gains over the past months, but unlike prior periods, it is showing a lot of volatility instead of settling into a tight base. This would concern me. If you were a gambler, you could try and pick it up on a pullback around the 55 range, and keep a tight stop on it. Otherwise, I would at least wait for it to break a new high on good volume. Tom Worley stkguru@netside.net - ----- Original Message ----- From: Bill Triffet To: canslim Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 2:44 PM Subject: [CANSLIM] ADVP anyone? Just looking at ADVP today and can't make a good definition of the chart. Would one consider this just a continuation of the 3/23 b/o or perhaps present another place to buy or add to? Note: It's up 7% intraday as I write this. As my luck would have it (or lack of good patience), I picked it up right at the start of the handle formation back in Feb. I thought it read as a weak double b and thought It could move up from there. I of course was bumped out as the handle sloped down. I see now looking back that it was forming a handle which broke out on 3/23. Is this how others would look at it? Still only dabbling in a small position of MDC. - -Bill Triffet - - - -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" - -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or - -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. - - - -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" - -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or - -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 18:27:19 -0400 From: "Tom Worley" Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings Hi Spencer, Note that WON did not write this article, David Saito-Chung wrote it. So his quotes of what WON would / might have said may not be wholly accurate. I do recall WON indicating, in discussing a cup and handle formation, that the bottom of the cup ideally is no more that 25% decline of the prior leg up. So David's suggestion that a stock that has dropped up to 60% would limit it to very few stocks (those who's "prior leg up" were an undeterred 25% of the leg up > 60% of the high). I will let some of the mathematicians figure out the actual equation, but seems to me that represents an unusually long and unconsolidated "leg up" to meet that criteria. I don't know if this might be an attempt to encourage more of us to consider the mightily fallen techs, where a 60% decline from the high is no big deal (after all, Naz was down something like 66%, so what's 60%, that is still outperformance, right??). But any stock down 60% from its high represents a stock with tremendous overhead resistance, especially if the prior rise was on volume. And, once again, we are feted with a chart example (I am not picking on you, Spencer, just IBD) that is 7 (SEVEN!!!) YEARS OLD. Come on, can't we come up with something more current?? Are there no other examples than can be found in the past five years, or three years? How about (excuse me for wishing) last year, when my short term memory was still working?? Tom Worley stkguru@netside.net - ----- Original Message ----- From: To: Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 2:03 PM Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings Anna and Others: I'm really surprised that noone brought up to mention the IBD Investors Corner article. I thought it was really great and useful. Also, Anna, concerning earnings and the market not reacting to the bad earnings coming out: WON says that is one of the items making up a bull market-ignoring the bad news. Here's the IBD Investors Corner article: Good Base Sets Stage For Huge Breakout By David Saito-Chung Investor's Business Daily To some folks, charts are boring. Nothing but sets of lines going up and down, they yawn. Extracting meaning is like reading tea leaves, right? Wrong. Great stocks share many of the same chart patterns. They form bases, launching pads upon which they lift off to new highs. Good bases also share many traits in terms of price-and-volume changes. It takes time and effort to spot these subtle clues. But mastering this skill will greatly improve your chances of finding the next big winners. A base forms when a stock stops marking new highs and falls. This "correction" takes it 20% to 60% below its high. The stock bottoms and then recovers close to its peak, setting up the next rally. When studying a base, first check how the stock falls the first few weeks. Does it drop grudgingly? If so, institutional investors may be trying to support the stock =E2=80=94 a good sign. Take Stock "X." Volume grew in the second down week, but it fell only 1 point to close in the middle of its weekly range (point 1 in the accompanying image). The next week, it gained a point, the third straight week it closed in the 34-35 range (point 2). These tight price closes over a few weeks mean long-term holders like to see the stock stay at that price level. Next, study how a stock reacts when it=E2=80=99s hitting new lows in the base. Does it bounce from its lows and close in the upper half of its price range? Even better, does it end the week higher? If so, the stock is finding support from big investors. Their long-term sponsorship paves the road for a sharp breakout. Stock X bounced nicely in the week ended April 22, 1994. It fell as much as 4.75, but finished with a 0.88-point gain (point 3). Three weeks later, the stock sold off hard. Yet it gave up just 0.13 point (point 4) on surging trade, another show of strength. Such reversals took place three more times from mid-June to early July (point 5). In the last three weeks of July, Stock X closed around 34.75 on light trade (point 6). This hinted that few sellers were around, just holders. The Nasdaq was in the middle of a correction. From June 24-27, it took out recent lows to lie 14% off its peak. But Stock X bucked the trend. On June 27, it bolted higher on strong trade (point 7), a sign of power. When the market turned two weeks later, this software firm was ready to rock For four weeks, it held above its 50-day moving average on soft volume (point 8). Then on Aug. 5, it shot out of its 18-month base and past its pivot of 36.88. This ignited eight straight days of gains in heavy volume (point 9). It rose 370% over the next 14 months. Microsoft? Nope, PeopleSoft. When you look for great bases, ignore the stock=E2=80=99s name. Make sure it=E2=80=99s in a leading group and has g= ood fundamentals. PeopleSoft had an EPS of 99, a 94 RS and robust sales growth. Five other stocks in its group had an RS of 95 or higher. (Part II will study a bad base.) jans - - - -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" - -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or - -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 17:31:42 -0500 From: "David Squires" Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings Hi Tom, Actually, one of the definitions of a flat base is a decline of 15-20%. Most cup and handle patterns retrace greater than 30%. The flat base is a bull market phenomenon usually. They happen during a simple market correction in the strongest stocks of that cycle. The weekly chart shows a real mess. The weekly flipping between closing on the low and then on the high shows absolutely no agreement on price. The overall pattern is faulty but the group is very strong and that must be respected. Regards, Dave - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Worley" To: Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 5:06 PM Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings > Sorry, David, the decline from 2/7 to 2/22 is too steep for me to > count that as any part of a base. It's around 20%, which if it > was an index, would be called a bear market. > > If you only look from 2/7 to 4/18, and compress the graph with > weekly charts rather than daily, then there is more of a base > formation. But I still find the chart fits better (using daily > charts) into a LLUR formation. > > Tom Worley > stkguru@netside.net > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: David Squires > To: > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 5:45 PM > Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying > before earnings > > > >>I continue to see MDC as a LLUR. The base you mention at 3/28 > was > too short and insignificant in the overall pattern for me to > call > it a base.<< > > > IMO, the base starts on 2/7 and ends on 4/18 with the attempted > breakout of > a high handle (the other handle had too much volume). That's long > enough to > qualify as an O'Neil base...flat base. The stock has a tendency > to from > tails but five tails in the last 6 days is pretty significant. > There is > (was) clearly a big seller at 44ish. Given that, the stock has > held up > reasonable well. If it breaks 44 it's off to the > races...otherwise support > is 39ish. Many of the stocks in this group are acting very good. > > Good Trading, > Dave > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Tom Worley" > To: > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 4:20 PM > Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying > before earnings > > > > Hi Spencer, > > > > I continue to see MDC as a LLUR. The base you mention at 3/28 > was > > too short and insignificant in the overall pattern for me to > call > > it a base. > > > > I do note that it rarely breaks the 50 DMA, and because of that > > would likely use that as the lower trendline rather than a > > straight line across the lows (but watching price and volume > > closely when it is falling, and be ready to act quickly). > > > > I don't attach as much significance to the lack of price gains > in > > the past five days, but would take it as a warning sign to > watch. > > It is important with a LLUR to recognize when / if it changes > its > > character and ceases to be a LLUR, however briefly. That is a > > sell signal that screams at you, because the whole basis for > > buying it is the LLUR pattern. > > > > "M" is very unstable right now, and affects LLUR stocks just > like > > any others. > > > > Tom Worley > > stkguru@netside.net > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: > > To: > > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 1:49 PM > > Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying > > before earnings > > > > > > Anna, > > > > This is how I see MDC: I believe it is in an primary LLUR > . > > I believe > > someone also said that it showed a basing formation. I > wouldn't > > have caught > > that (I see one now where the BO was around 3/28 at $39. > > However, I imagine > > stocks can have more than one formation, and the LLUR seems to > be > > the main > > one). I do see the LLUR. It is pretty obvious, and its up > > trendline has > > been pretty darn accurate at 9-11 points since last June. > > > > Notice, though, that it isn't rising so much over the last > 5 > > days-even > > though volume has exploded. To me, this indicates churning (no > > demand). It > > is also important to note that during this temporary bull that > we > > are having, > > it hasn't popped up strongly. I believe it will now fall to > the > > down > > trendline. In the past, after it hits the trendline, it > bounces > > up, and then > > falls again (testing the low-but at a higher price level). I > > would buy > > following the 2nd fall, buying at the down trendline break on > > high volume. > > Also, I would probably use short moving averages to confirm-all > > of them being > > on a daily basis (eg. the daily penetrating the 4 penetrating > the > > 10). > > > > Thank you for presenting an interesting case study. > > > > Any other responses on how MDC is viewed? > > > > jans > > > > > > - > > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > > > > > > > - > > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > > - > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > > > - > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. - - - -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" - -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or - -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 18:39:51 -0400 From: "Tom Worley" Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings who's definition, WON's, or someone else's? Tom Worley stkguru@netside.net - ----- Original Message ----- From: David Squires To: Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 6:31 PM Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings Hi Tom, Actually, one of the definitions of a flat base is a decline of 15-20%. Most cup and handle patterns retrace greater than 30%. The flat base is a bull market phenomenon usually. They happen during a simple market correction in the strongest stocks of that cycle. The weekly chart shows a real mess. The weekly flipping between closing on the low and then on the high shows absolutely no agreement on price. The overall pattern is faulty but the group is very strong and that must be respected. Regards, Dave - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Worley" To: Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 5:06 PM Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings > Sorry, David, the decline from 2/7 to 2/22 is too steep for me to > count that as any part of a base. It's around 20%, which if it > was an index, would be called a bear market. > > If you only look from 2/7 to 4/18, and compress the graph with > weekly charts rather than daily, then there is more of a base > formation. But I still find the chart fits better (using daily > charts) into a LLUR formation. > > Tom Worley > stkguru@netside.net > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: David Squires > To: > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 5:45 PM > Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying > before earnings > > > >>I continue to see MDC as a LLUR. The base you mention at 3/28 > was > too short and insignificant in the overall pattern for me to > call > it a base.<< > > > IMO, the base starts on 2/7 and ends on 4/18 with the attempted > breakout of > a high handle (the other handle had too much volume). That's long > enough to > qualify as an O'Neil base...flat base. The stock has a tendency > to from > tails but five tails in the last 6 days is pretty significant. > There is > (was) clearly a big seller at 44ish. Given that, the stock has > held up > reasonable well. If it breaks 44 it's off to the > races...otherwise support > is 39ish. Many of the stocks in this group are acting very good. > > Good Trading, > Dave > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Tom Worley" > To: > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 4:20 PM > Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying > before earnings > > > > Hi Spencer, > > > > I continue to see MDC as a LLUR. The base you mention at 3/28 > was > > too short and insignificant in the overall pattern for me to > call > > it a base. > > > > I do note that it rarely breaks the 50 DMA, and because of that > > would likely use that as the lower trendline rather than a > > straight line across the lows (but watching price and volume > > closely when it is falling, and be ready to act quickly). > > > > I don't attach as much significance to the lack of price gains > in > > the past five days, but would take it as a warning sign to > watch. > > It is important with a LLUR to recognize when / if it changes > its > > character and ceases to be a LLUR, however briefly. That is a > > sell signal that screams at you, because the whole basis for > > buying it is the LLUR pattern. > > > > "M" is very unstable right now, and affects LLUR stocks just > like > > any others. > > > > Tom Worley > > stkguru@netside.net > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: > > To: > > Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 1:49 PM > > Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying > > before earnings > > > > > > Anna, > > > > This is how I see MDC: I believe it is in an primary LLUR > . > > I believe > > someone also said that it showed a basing formation. I > wouldn't > > have caught > > that (I see one now where the BO was around 3/28 at $39. > > However, I imagine > > stocks can have more than one formation, and the LLUR seems to > be > > the main > > one). I do see the LLUR. It is pretty obvious, and its up > > trendline has > > been pretty darn accurate at 9-11 points since last June. > > > > Notice, though, that it isn't rising so much over the last > 5 > > days-even > > though volume has exploded. To me, this indicates churning (no > > demand). It > > is also important to note that during this temporary bull that > we > > are having, > > it hasn't popped up strongly. I believe it will now fall to > the > > down > > trendline. In the past, after it hits the trendline, it > bounces > > up, and then > > falls again (testing the low-but at a higher price level). I > > would buy > > following the 2nd fall, buying at the down trendline break on > > high volume. > > Also, I would probably use short moving averages to confirm-all > > of them being > > on a daily basis (eg. the daily penetrating the 4 penetrating > the > > 10). > > > > Thank you for presenting an interesting case study. > > > > Any other responses on how MDC is viewed? > > > > jans > > > > > > - > > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > > > > > > > - > > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > > - > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > > > - > -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" > -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or > -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. - - - -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" - -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or - -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. - - - -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" - -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or - -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 17:00:40 -0600 From: esetser Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying before earnings OK Tom, now you've really got me confused. I see MDC with a 9 week base starting on 2/7 and ended on 4/12. (I based the breakout on CLOSING above the pivot in this case.) Do you not consider this period a base? I find it confusing that you quote 2 - 4 week bases in your weekly list, but then you complain that this 9 weeks was too short? I must be seeing something different here. At 05:20 PM 4/25/01 -0400, you wrote: >Hi Spencer, > >I continue to see MDC as a LLUR. The base you mention at 3/28 was >too short and insignificant in the overall pattern for me to call >it a base. > >I do note that it rarely breaks the 50 DMA, and because of that >would likely use that as the lower trendline rather than a >straight line across the lows (but watching price and volume >closely when it is falling, and be ready to act quickly). > >I don't attach as much significance to the lack of price gains in >the past five days, but would take it as a warning sign to watch. >It is important with a LLUR to recognize when / if it changes its >character and ceases to be a LLUR, however briefly. That is a >sell signal that screams at you, because the whole basis for >buying it is the LLUR pattern. > >"M" is very unstable right now, and affects LLUR stocks just like >any others. > >Tom Worley >stkguru@netside.net > > >----- Original Message ----- >From: >To: >Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2001 1:49 PM >Subject: Re: [CANSLIM] was "q for Tim and Earl", now buying >before earnings > > >Anna, > > This is how I see MDC: I believe it is in an primary LLUR . >I believe >someone also said that it showed a basing formation. I wouldn't >have caught >that (I see one now where the BO was around 3/28 at $39. >However, I imagine >stocks can have more than one formation, and the LLUR seems to be >the main >one). I do see the LLUR. It is pretty obvious, and its up >trendline has >been pretty darn accurate at 9-11 points since last June. > > Notice, though, that it isn't rising so much over the last 5 >days-even >though volume has exploded. To me, this indicates churning (no >demand). It >is also important to note that during this temporary bull that we >are having, >it hasn't popped up strongly. I believe it will now fall to the >down >trendline. In the past, after it hits the trendline, it bounces >up, and then >falls again (testing the low-but at a higher price level). I >would buy >following the 2nd fall, buying at the down trendline break on >high volume. >Also, I would probably use short moving averages to confirm-all >of them being >on a daily basis (eg. the daily penetrating the 4 penetrating the >10). > > Thank you for presenting an interesting case study. > > Any other responses on how MDC is viewed? > >jans > > >- >-To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" >-In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or >-"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > > >- >-To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" >-In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or >-"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. > > - - - -To subscribe/unsubscribe, email "majordomo@xmission.com" - -In the email body, write "subscribe canslim" or - -"unsubscribe canslim". Do not use quotes in your email. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2001 17:51:32 -0500 From: Gene Ricci Subject: [CANSLIM] Investor's Corner Is Free on investors.com This is a multi-part message in MIME format. - ------=_NextPart_000_0255_01C0CDB0.5D24B9C0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable The daily Investor's Corner is FREE without being a subscriber. Go to investors.com Click on TODAY IN IBD (left column) Click on INVESTOR'S CORNER (right column) If you want older issues you can find them in archives.... here's what = there (click on one of the topics and it'll take you to investors.com): Investor's Corner Archives Table of Contents=20 =20 How Do I Find Winning Stocks? 01. Superior Profits Fuel Long-Term Winners 02. Use EPS Rating To Find Fastest Growing Firms 03. Great Expectations: Will Future Profits Grow? 04. New Composite Rating Uncovers Top Stocks 05. Demand Stellar Sales Growth For Your Stocks 06. Longtime Leaders Churn Out Strong Margins 07. Return On Equity Helps Gauge Stock Quality 08. Relative Strength: How Does Your Stock Rate? 09. Best Stocks Have High Demand, No Matter The Supply 10. How To Track Institutional-Quality Stocks 11. Hitch A Ride With Institutional Investors 12. Profits Reassert Their Key Investment Role 13. Don't Overlook IPOs In Quest For Great Stocks 14. Best Stocks Post Highs When Market Turns 15. Keep An Eye On Institutions' Newest Buys Where's The Market Headed? 01. Twin Windows Give First-Hand Look Into Market 02. Corrections Clear The Way For New Leaders 03. Sectors Shed Extra Light On Market Trends 04. Wait For Market To Confirm Fresh Rally 05. Too Much Fear, Greed Can Turn A Market 06. Let The Market Tell You When It Hits A Bottom 07. String Of Failed Breakouts Raises Red Flag 08. Insist On Quality Breakouts As The Market Turns 09. Rising Volatility Can Be Beat With Discipline 10. Look For New Crop Of Leaders In New Rally 11. New Issues Tend To Magnify Broad Market 12. Take Advantage Of Bear-Market Downtime 13. Track Groups For New Signs Of Leadership What Common Investing Pitfalls Should I Watch For? 01. Don't Let Past Miscues Thwart Future Buys 02. Cast Your Ego Aside: Cut Losses Quickly 03. Industry Leader Isn't Always The Largest 04. Best Growth Stocks Surge From High P-Es 05. Proven Winners Often Repeat Their Success 06. Target Stocks That Are Hitting New Highs 07. Bear Proves Why Cutting Losses Is Rule No. 1 08. New Rally Will Leave Defensive Stocks Behind 09. Don't Rely On Cyclicals For Long-Term Gains 10. Don't Pin Future On Market's Fallen Leaders 11. Insider Selling Rarely Defeats Winning Stock 12. Let Bargain Hunters Brave Plunging Stocks 13. Don't Fixate On Wall Street Profit Estimates 14. Market Cap Plays Minor Role In Stock Success 15. Let Market Decide Which Stocks To Buy 16. Keep Sound Trading Rules In Bear Market 17. Value Investing: A Tough Job If Done Alone What Can Technical Indicators Tell Me? 01. Read Stock Charts For Unbiased Analysis 02. Cup With Handle Is Filled With Potential 03. Cups And Handles For Discerning Investors 04. Learn How To Analyze High-Volume Churn 05. Double Bottom Clears Way For Big Move 06. Pump Up Your Portfolio With Flat Bases 07. Track Volume To Uncover Key Selling Clues 08. Buying Late Can Turn Great Stocks Into Losers 09. Chase Price Gaps Out Of Bases With Caution 10. Scan Stock Bases For Clues Of Future Success 11. Choppy Bear-Market Bases Require Keen Eye 12. Base-On-Base Shows Strength In Bad Market 13. Tight Bases Set Stage For Winning Stocks 14. Watch How Your Stock Acts Around 50-Day 15. New High In Light Volume Raises Red Flag 16. Averaging Up Leverages Your Winning Stocks 17. Relative Strength Line Can Trace Bullish Clue =20 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -=20 =20 - ------=_NextPart_000_0255_01C0CDB0.5D24B9C0 Content-Type: text/html; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
The daily Investor's Corner is FREE = without=20 being a subscriber.
 
Go to investors.com
Click on TODAY IN IBD (left = column)
Click on INVESTOR'S CORNER (right=20 column)
 
If you want older issues you can find = them in=20 archives.... here's what there (click on
one of the topics and it'll take = you to=20 investors.com):
 

Investor's Corner Archives

Table of Contents

 =20

How Do I Find Winning Stocks?

 

01. Superior = Profits=20 Fuel Long-Term Winners

 

02. Use EPS = Rating To=20 Find Fastest Growing Firms

 

03. Great = Expectations:=20 Will Future Profits Grow?

 

04. New = Composite Rating=20 Uncovers Top Stocks

 

05. Demand = Stellar Sales=20 Growth For Your Stocks

 

06. Longtime = Leaders=20 Churn Out Strong Margins

 

07. Return On = Equity=20 Helps Gauge Stock Quality

 

08. Relative = Strength:=20 How Does Your Stock Rate?

 

09. Best = Stocks Have=20 High Demand, No Matter The Supply

 

10. How To = Track=20 Institutional-Quality Stocks

 

11. Hitch A = Ride With=20 Institutional Investors

 

12. Profits = Reassert=20 Their Key Investment Role

 

13. Don't = Overlook IPOs=20 In Quest For Great Stocks

 

14. Best = Stocks Post=20 Highs When Market Turns

 

15. Keep An = Eye On=20 Institutions' Newest Buys

 

Where’s The Market Headed?

 

01. Twin = Windows Give=20 First-Hand Look Into Market

 

02. Corrections = Clear The=20 Way For New Leaders

 

03. Sectors = Shed Extra=20 Light On Market Trends

 

04. Wait For = Market To=20 Confirm Fresh Rally

 

05. Too Much = Fear, Greed=20 Can Turn A Market

 

06. Let The = Market Tell=20 You When It Hits A Bottom

 

07. String Of = Failed=20 Breakouts Raises Red Flag

 

08. Insist On = Quality=20 Breakouts As The Market Turns

 

09. Rising = Volatility Can=20 Be Beat With Discipline

 

10. Look For = New Crop Of=20 Leaders In New Rally

 

11. New Issues = Tend To=20 Magnify Broad Market

 

12. Take = Advantage Of=20 Bear-Market Downtime

 

13. Track = Groups For New=20 Signs Of Leadership

 

What Common Investing Pitfalls Should I Watch = For?

 

01. Don't Let = Past=20 Miscues Thwart Future Buys

 

02. Cast Your = Ego=20 Aside: Cut Losses Quickly

 

03. Industry = Leader=20 Isn't Always The Largest

 

04. Best = Growth Stocks=20 Surge From High P-Es

 

05. Proven = Winners=20 Often Repeat Their Success

 

06. Target = Stocks That=20 Are Hitting New Highs

 

07. Bear = Proves Why=20 Cutting Losses Is Rule No. 1

 

08. New Rally = Will=20 Leave Defensive Stocks Behind

 

09. Don't = Rely On=20 Cyclicals For Long-Term Gains

 

10. Don't Pin = Future On=20 Market's Fallen Leaders

 

11. Insider = Selling=20 Rarely Defeats Winning Stock

 

12. Let = Bargain Hunters=20 Brave Plunging Stocks

 

13. Don't = Fixate On=20 Wall Street Profit Estimates

 

14. Market = Cap Plays=20 Minor Role In Stock Success

 

15. Let = Market Decide=20 Which Stocks To Buy

 

16. Keep = Sound Trading=20 Rules In Bear Market

 

17. Value = Investing: A=20 Tough Job If Done Alone

 

What Can Technical Indicators Tell Me?

 

01. Read Stock = Charts For=20 Unbiased Analysis

 

02. Cup With = Handle Is=20 Filled With Potential

 

03. Cups And = Handles For=20 Discerning Investors

 

04. Learn How To = Analyze=20 High-Volume Churn

 

05. Double Bottom = Clears=20 Way For Big Move

 

06. Pump Up Your = Portfolio=20 With Flat Bases

 

07. Track Volume = To Uncover=20 Key Selling Clues

 

08. Buying Late = Can Turn=20 Great Stocks Into Losers

 

09. Chase Price = Gaps Out Of=20 Bases With Caution

 

10. Scan Stock = Bases For=20 Clues Of Future Success

 

11. Choppy = Bear-Market=20 Bases Require Keen Eye

 

12. Base-On-Base = Shows=20 Strength In Bad Market

 

13. Tight Bases = Set Stage=20 For Winning Stocks

 

14. Watch How = Your Stock=20 Acts Around 50-Day

 

15. New High In = Light=20 Volume Raises Red Flag

 

16. Averaging Up = Leverages=20 Your Winning Stocks

 

17. Relative = Strength Line=20 Can Trace Bullish Clue

 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - = - - - - -=20

 
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