Originally posted by El Cazador
I was thinking the same thing regarding it turning up after dropping below S1 (906) I think the more important common number in this case was yesterday's LOD (904.25). When these numbers are clustered it seems more reliable.
~EC
Originally posted by ArchAngel
wally - maybe my chart's wrong or you're using the term "exactly" loosely, but the S&P's didn't stop falling this morning exactly at the 911.25 level on my chart.
909.25 is what my chart shows. Which is closer to the 100 day EMA than the so-called pivot and the 100 DEMA seems like the most probable source of that support.
As far as "stopping the advance" at R1 @ 918.75, my chart has that level breached as well with no 8-9 point retracement that I can see.
At what times of the day are seeing those pivot bounces?
Originally posted by ArchAngel
wally - maybe my chart's wrong or you're using the term "exactly" loosely, but the S&P's didn't stop falling this morning exactly at the 911.25 level on my chart.
909.25 is what my chart shows. Which is closer to the 100 day EMA than the so-called pivot and the 100 DEMA seems like the most probable source of that support.
As far as "stopping the advance" at R1 @ 918.75, my chart has that level breached as well with no 8-9 point retracement that I can see.
At what times of the day are seeing those pivot bounces?
Originally posted by El Cazador
I use Track Data and I have 911.25 for the low at 9:54 EST.
Also "using the term "exactly" loosely" reminds me that I never follow pivots or other common numbers exactly. I think they should be used as a handle where the market could turn around or just pause. R1 does not always stop an advance... sometimes it blows right through and on toward R2 or yesterday's HOD. But when you see your MACD or CCI showing divergence and the price still moving toward a common number you might want to keep a close eye on it. My 2 cents.
~EC