The ACD Method

Huge number of stocks with rising positive numbers and confirms

A zero or +2 will confirm DIA tomorrow

A -3 or better will confirm HYG tomorrow

Silver (SLV) confirmed today

XLB will confirm tomorrow

XLE will confirm tomorrow

A -3 or better will confirm XLI tomorrow
 
In addition using the standard numberline scoring system, I keep track of a separate numberline that adds/removes 1 point when a move of +/- 3% or more occurs in an underlying stock, and use tomorrow's open as the closing price (to account for overnight gaps).

So for example, if a stock makes a good C up and ends up +6% for the day (as of tomorrow morning's open), that days score would be 5 instead of the standard 4. I do this because if a stock has a +20 numberline and then posts terrible earnings and starts tanking, I want the numberline to quickly start reflecting this bearishness, which this custom line does.

I won't enter positions solely off this, but use it as a confirmation tool. If my standard numberline is giving a stock a +12 score, but the custom line is only saying +3, I wont be as bullish.

Just passing at along.
 
In addition using the standard numberline scoring system, I keep track of a separate numberline that adds/removes 1 point when a move of +/- 3% or more occurs in an underlying stock, and use tomorrow's open as the closing price (to account for overnight gaps).

So for example, if a stock makes a good C up and ends up +6% for the day (as of tomorrow morning's open), that days score would be 5 instead of the standard 4. I do this because if a stock has a +20 numberline and then posts terrible earnings and starts tanking, I want the numberline to quickly start reflecting this bearishness, which this custom line does.

I won't enter positions solely off this, but use it as a confirmation tool. If my standard numberline is giving a stock a +12 score, but the custom line is only saying +3, I wont be as bullish.

Just passing at along.

I would be careful with this. The number line is not really a measure of how strong or weak a product is but rather a measure of trend. For example, I have two stocks, A and B. A has a +30 number line and B has a +10 number line. The +30 is not necessarily a stronger stock. It merely has a smoother trend. In many cases the stock with a +30 number line might be up 5% since confirm while the +10 stock might be up 30% since confirm.

In fact one of the interesting and robust features of the number line is how it can increase in value when stocks are going down! I don't know of any other quantitative measure that replicates that.
 
I would be careful with this. The number line is not really a measure of how strong or weak a product is but rather a measure of trend. For example, I have two stocks, A and B. A has a +30 number line and B has a +10 number line. The +30 is not necessarily a stronger stock. It merely has a smoother trend. In many cases the stock with a +30 number line might be up 5% since confirm while the +10 stock might be up 30% since confirm.

In fact one of the interesting and robust features of the number line is how it can increase in value when stocks are going down! I don't know of any other quantitative measure that replicates that.
Mav the more and more I use number lines, the more I think that there biggest strong point has to be when used for relative analysis and spotting marginal change. I have not found a better method than.

This is something I used to be useless at pre ACD, but is now one of the most important parts of my trading.
 
Mav the more and more I use number lines, the more I think that there biggest strong point has to be when used for relative analysis and spotting marginal change. I have not found a better method than.

This is something I used to be useless at pre ACD, but is now one of the most important parts of my trading.

Right...benchmarking is a critical part of the analysis. ACD allows one to normalize data and get rid of the noise in the data. Something that is just not possible with standard charting.
 
I would be careful with this. The number line is not really a measure of how strong or weak a product is but rather a measure of trend ... In fact one of the interesting and robust features of the number line is how it can increase in value when stocks are going down! I don't know of any other quantitative measure that replicates that.
Has potential for a divergence indicator.
 
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