Blog Post: 86 US new highs, 10 lows and 35 at ATH; Day 36 of $QQQ short term up-trend; see list of 13 doublers at ATH, 4 are in residential construction

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These 13 stocks are on my IBD/MS watchlist of promising stocks, reached an ATH Tuesday and have at least doubled their yearly lows. Interesting that 4 of 13 are in residential construction. Perhaps investors are betting on lower mortgage rates in the near future. This list is sorted by the last column, close today/lowest price the last 250 days. NVDA made it too!

Blog Post: Here is an explanation of how I compute new US highs and lows each day and used it to exit in 11/2021; the GMI is 6 (of 6)

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I tweeted a few days ago about my analysis of new highs and lows and how it helped me to exit the market in November, 2021. I received many questions about how I  compute these statistics and thought I would show you. I have created a New High and a New Low column in TC2000,  my favorite technical analysis software. I then select the watchlist stored in TC2000 for all US stocks and sort it by each of the columns separately. When I sort by the New High column, all stocks with a check are at a new high. I scroll down to the end of the stocks with checks, click on it and then can see to the left its number. That tells me the number of new highs. I repeat the process for new lows.

The trick is to create a set of conditions that filter for new highs. You cannot use a TCD2000 PCF  (personal formula) because any stocks that did not exist for the period in the formula will result in a null result. For example, if you try to calculate a new high in the past 250 days, any stock that did not have  valid closes for the past 250 days would result in a null result. To get around this limitation you have to use the built in TC2000 conditions, Price New High and Price New Low.

Right click in a column in your watchlist and select Insert, true/false and then new condition. Then search on price new high and once added and the parameters are set, write 2 formulas. Here are the filter conditions I use. First set all conditions to days. Price History New High set to 250 bars and now.  Next write the formula:  V>10000 to eliminate stocks with very low trading volume. Write the formula C>10 to eliminate stocks closing less than $10. You can use alternative numbers if you wish.

Once you have entered these conditions, select the Display tab. Then choose check and any color you want the check to be. The default setting for updating is manual, change it if you want it to update automatically. Create a second column retaining all filters except substitute Price New Low condition for the New High condition.

Once you have created these two columns, select the US stocks built in watchlist and then sort each column. There should be about 6486 stocks in this watchlist. On Friday, there were 207 new highs and 10 new lows.

Every night after the close I calculate these and other statistics and add them to my spreadsheet. In November, 2021, I noticed that while QQQ was continuing its series of all-time highs, the number of new lows was surging. This factor, together with the knowledge that the markets had been red hot led me to exit the markets. It was a lucky call but when QQQ later entered a Stage 4 decline I was content to remain out of the market for over a year. Here is my spreadsheet from 11/2021. QQQ’s peak occurred  on  11/22/2021, when there were 438 new lows. Column  I shows my QQQ  short term trend count.  On11/22  it  registered U-26,  the  26th  day  of  the  short term up-trend, which I track in my daily blog.

Some readers asked what the pattern of yearly highs and lows is now. Here it is.  There are very few new lows.  Column G shows the number of ATHs (all time highs). Note that on Friday there were 207 new highs, 10 new lows and 78 at an all-time high. Friday was the 35th day in the QQQ short term up-trend.

 

 

The GMI remains Green and registers 6 (of 6).

Blog Post: Day 34 of $QQQ short term up-trend; 146 US new highs, 18 lows and 50 at ATHs; 2 stocks at ATH after recent GLB: $AMPH and $ORCL, see daily and monthly charts

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A green line break-out (GLB)  in a strong market can sometimes be the beginning of a big move. AMPH and ORCL broke above their green lines and have gone on to a series of ATHs (all time highs). Look for stocks that hit an ATH and then have rested for at least 3 months. When they close above that earlier peak (where the green line is drawn) it can be a major buy signal. A rocket-stock to the moon must continually hit new highs.

Here are their monthly charts.