Quote from chaos:
Could you explain what you mean when you refer to a stock maintaining rank in your Final Universe? Does this refer to a stock cycling a minimum of five times in six months for a gain of at least 20% in each cycle?
Yes. An equity must maintain a minimum of 5 cycles (of 20% or more price increase) over a period of 6 - 8 days in order to maintain a position in The Final Universe. Any stock which fails to Maintain Rank (stops cycling) finds itself removed from the Final universe at the End of the Month. When using the Hershey Chartscripts, check the upper left hand corner of the Main Window Pane. If you see the word, "None" after Rank: The stock no longer has a rank.
Quote from stevegee58:
Here are some new candidates for the final universe. These were determined to meet the basic fundamental criteria from moneycentral.msn.com and finance.yahoo.com information:
BITS GIGM IIG QUIK TSCM
Thanks for these additions. Although I have yet to review any charts for the above list of stocks, Qcharts lists the following:
BITS: Price below $10.00 USD
GIGM: Price below $10.00 USD
IIG: Already in my Final Universe
QUIK: Price below $10.00 USD
TSCM: Already in my Final Universe
If I were to consider adding any of the above stocks (not already in the Final Universe), I would look at GIGM over all others. QCharts shows 57% Insider Ownership for GIGM, whereas, BITS and QUIK have less than 5% of their shares owned by Managers and / or Company Directors.
Quote from stevegee58:
Hey there spydertrader I really liked your video (that's you, right?). It's a biiiiiiig file but worth watching.
Jack made the video, and you hear his voice. I apologize for any lack of clarity resulting from my posts. I simply wanted to make these files available while we wait for the various Hershey Web Sites to arrive at completion.
Another video (which should arrive via snail mail in about a week) contains additional information, but it runs about 40 minutes long.
Quote from stevegee58:
One thing that I hadn't pulled into my thinking was how to use the score. Up to now I've been just scanning the FU every day for dry-ups and taking trades on the normal entry criteria of volume, stoch, macd, etc. I never really saw how I'd use the score on a daily basis however.
So the idea is that a stock has to be in dry-up, meet the entry criteria *and* have a score of 7, 1, or 0? Or is it really that stringent?
I have been less stringent with 'score' when it comes to choosing my trades. Jack has suggested in the past that scores shouldn't receive the highest priority when determining equities to trade. As a result, I have viewed score as "a nice thing to have in your favor," but not 'mandatory' to have in your favor.
I hope that helps.
- Spydertrader