Many here do not indicate they give a hoot about the Stock Market's mid- to long- term projections. These are probably the stubborn types with money that are on quiet having not foreseen or traded out of the 50% slump we've just experienced.
No doubt many heart attacks have occurred as you will see these "investors" close out positions on the way up as they near their <i>breakeven</i> point.
Good luck with that! Not much to worry about. . .C is up $.57 inthe pre-market or nearly 22%.
That being said, I DO consider the market and it's <b>longer-than-2-minute</b> time frame. Currently, the indexes are trying to put in a bottom. Here is what to look for if this is successful:
Keep a close watch on price and volume as each upcoming day transpires - and for signs of any emerging leadership. Leading growth stocks sport top technicals and fundamentals.
A market uptrend rarely goes far without the support of leading stocks. Few top-rated stocks have built healthy bases, let alone broken out to new highs.
All of that means your best course of action is to let the market come to you. If the market builds on the prior weeks' gains and starts yielding more breakouts, you'll have plenty of chances to profit with well-timed buys.
Look to see if leading stocks are rebounding off 10-week moving averages. Some top stocks are still low in their potential bases. That's OK. History shows that the best stocks break out up to 13 weeks after the follow-through day.
Keep in mind, recent gains have been brisk.
We may get a resumption of the rally, simply because many stocks are now holding up above support.
If they break down further or distribution days (selling in higher volume) stack up - - the budding rally will most likely fail.
p$