Price Flip Blocks Layout

2 10 2008

Stocks that are trading in a range do not complete TD Combo and TD Sequential countdowns very often.  For stocks that are trading sideways, DeMark likes to use the TDST lines of support or resistance in conjunction with the Sequential or Combo setup count to swing trade. 

Basically, you sell if there is a finished setup count, on the way up, and the price is nearing the overhead TDST line (green).  You buy if there is a finished setup count, on the way down, and the price is coming into support, defined by a TDST line (red).   I have put together another Blocks layout that scans for all stocks that meet these requirements.  I’ll post it soon. 

 





Market Monitor Tutorial

1 10 2008

Market Monitor Movie

Pradeep Bonde from the Stockbee blog made a reference to a small movie that I put together for my other website, MarketTurbulence.com.  In the tutorial, I explain how the Market Monitor breadth chart is constructed and how I apply it using Blocks 3.1 (soon to be StockFinder). 

If you use Blocks, you can download the layout after registering for MarketTurbulence.com.  I also have constructed many of the DeMark indicators, including TD Sequential, TD Combo, TD REI, and TD Pressure.  These required a lot of time and effort and I originally wanted to use them for myself.  Blocks does an excellent job of scanning through charts and is a perfect match for the DeMark indicators.  After receiving many requests, I have made them available over on MarketTurbulence.com.





Free TD Combo Buy Signals

2 09 2008

Want some free picks for tomorrow’s trading?  Here is a list of all the stocks in the Russell 3000 that have completed a hourly TD Combo Buy countdown.  In this table I have given the Countdown, Percent Risk, Absolute Risk (ie dollar value above stop loss) and finally the stop loss.  Do not attempt to trade these unless you have experience with DeMark indicators.   

This is a list of all the stocks in the Russell 3000 that have completed a daily TD Combo countdown today. 

Would anyone be interested in a daily or weekly newsletter with this type of information?  I would include price targets and feature a few charts. 





Can you say “Countertrend Bounce”?

21 08 2008

I guess that since oil made a large move today we are going to have to endure listening to the fundamentalists run around telling us that oil is moving up because there is some conflict between Russia and Georgia.  Never mind the fact that Russia invaded Georgia on the 8th of August and today was the first solid move up.  Never mind that oil has gone down from 140 to 112 almost non-stop.  I’m always shocked when I hear people talk as if there was no such thing as a countertrend bounce.

Not only was oil a perfect example of the benefits of paying attention to price, but as I posted last week, it was also a great example of TD Combo in action.  Here is another chart, this time the hourly, that could have given you an even more precise entry point. 

USO Hourly Chart

USO Hourly Chart





Timing the Trade and DeMark

23 07 2008

I have been listening to Tom O’Brien for several years.  Tom has developed a trading system that he calls “Timing the Trade” which he has used to great effect for many years.  Tom’s system buys and sells countertrend moves and is based on price and volume.  It is not a very easy system to learn but I have found that coupling it with another countertrend system, like TD Sequential and TD Combo, one can drastically simplify the process of finding and analyzing charts. 

Using the charts that I have put together using Blocks 3.1, it is easy to find TD Sequential and TD Combo sell signals.  Using Timing the Trade it is possible to either confirm or eliminate the buy or sell decision.  Let’s look at SYNA.  As you can see, there are both Sequential and Combo sell signals with the current price being close to the stop loss point, making it a low risk entry point.  Although there have been several days since the sell signal was given, that particular sell level often holds as resistance for a secondary short point.  This is where Timing the Trade comes in.  In O’Brien’s method, he likes to look at “swing points” that he defines as points on the chart with high, abnormal, volume spikes.  Tom thinks of these points as areas were the most traders agreed on price.  The key is to compare later prices with the “swing point” bars.  If the price comes into the “swing point” with higher volume expect it to continue through it, if it comes into the “swing” with less volume the price will bounce off of it.   

The Sequential and Combo charts say to short it, but looking at the volume, one can see that the volume is expanding.  So using Timing the Trade, I would think twice before shorting it. 





CWEI Parabolic Move

27 05 2008

While reading this blog you might have observed that I tend to favor TD Sequential over TD Combo. Yes it is true, TD Combo gets much less attention because it seems to be more applicable to specific chart formations over others. This should not come as a surprise as TD Combo was developed after TD Sequential and was specifically designed to increase the likelihood of identifying a price extreme. Overall I find TD Combo to be less universal, but useful nevertheless.

I seem to find that the pattern most applicable to TD Combo are extremely fast moves, either up or down.  Tonights post is more of an experiment than anything else.  CWEI is making a parabolic move and has completed a TD Combo sell countdown in both the daily and weekly charts.  I wanted to post them and check back on them later to see how well the indicator did at picking the top.