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Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis - Page 402

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

(2020-08-20, 07:35 PM)the_manassa_mauler Wrote: I had a couple of ques. re your sector breadth bar chart:
Sorry for not getting back earlier, I've had othr stuff on for a few days.


Quote:- is this something you are putting together or does a service publish these weekly?

It is something I produce myself, for myself but sometimes post here in case it is of interest to others. I suggest taking it with a pinch of salt, or perhaps a whole lorry load as I cannot make any promises that it is error free. I have a database of stock data and I break it down into sectors etc and carry out various calculations on it to calculate the breadth. I thought sector charts would give a little more oversight than just the full market.

Quote:- I'm confused how to read it. For ex., industrials has  a green long score, but it also has a LT sell red long position. That seems in contradiction. Why do they conflict when they are both long views?

I see your point. Perhaps I've not used the best terminology. I think 'Long position' is perhaps an error that should be corrected. I think it is best to describe, in very general terms, what I am doing. I calculate breadth data, advance / decline line etc and use various calculations which I characterized by very short, short medium and long breadth scores based on the time periods used in their calculations. The Overall, and errantly labelled 'Long Position' is a sort of consensus score based on the very short, short medium and long term scores. This is all fairly ad-hoc. The overall scores are as follows:
* Green/buy - breadth scores positive / increasing in all time periods - consider buying.
* Grey/hold - indeterminate. Generally do nothing (of couse check stops)
* Yellow/ ST Hold/Sell - Breadth has generally worsened in the time periods but not necessarily terrible. Consider selling positions, tightening stops on shorter term positions.
* Red/LT Sell - consider selling or tightening stops on longer term positions.
* Black or Brown - these are special cases that were derived from looking at warning signs before recent events, the 1987 crash etc. This is quite tricky to engineer something that is reliable and does not give false posatives.

I can't say I've had massive success, I moved down this route end of last year after the markets had gone sideways for a while and I was starting to see results just as the crash came in. So I'd not take what I have done too seriously, but it might be interesting to compare with others. Of course, you should do your own breadth research to ensure you have your own view.

Really what the sector breadth means is whether this sector is a good one to look at, or whether it might be best to shy away from it right now.


Quote:- I'm also confused about healthcare. It got a very short & long run green breadth score. yet short & medium are red. Does that mean its a buy now & looks good long but riskier in a medium hold?

I think you are reading too much into this as it is a fairly ad-hoc scheme that I've created. For the very short term and short term indicators for example I was using the MACD of the advance decline line and the advancing declining volume, for example. The very short term score was based on the histogram of the MACD and the short term on the MACD being above the signal line. I'm assuming that you know what a MACD is, if not there are excellent resources elsewhere. I've tweaked things more recently, so it may be a little different to that now.

The way I have intended to use this is to buy only when all the time periods are positive as that hopefully means you have best chance of a stock that will move in a positive direction. Be warned though, I'm not sure how good I am at practicing what I preach.


Quote:- on the momentum table, for the tech spdr etf what does the 70 fifty MA mean vs a 44 one hundred fifty MA mean % wise?

These are probably dumb questions, but I'm very interested in measuring and trying to time sectors. So this interests me a lot. any help would be appreciate, thanks.

On the momentum table I'm calculating the slope of the 50 day and 150 day simple moving averages and then converting that figure into a per annum basis, e.g. what % increase if the slope were a year long straight line. I sort the data based on those annualized slopes.

There are not dumb questions. I think the best thing to do is to plot the sector charts side by side with their 50 and 150 day SMAs, that would give you a lot of information. Also, if you are in a position to plot there relative strengths to each other, or an index, that is useful.

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

Sector breadth

US:
   

US sector momentum
   


UK:
   


Commodities:
   

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

Observations on the S&P500 / Russell 3000 (approximately)

A few things I've noticed from my own breadth calcs:
   

1. Weinstein momentum is headed for the zero line.
2 & 3, McClellan oscillators are quite negative, not been this negative for a couple of months.
4. Number of stocks above their 50 day SME is taking a dive, but is still above 50%.
6. Number of stocks above their 200 day MA has just dipped down below 50%, basically seemed to have bounced off of this value.

I wonder if the same is true with NYSE data?

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

My breadth chart for the major pharmaceuticals is showing a deterioration in breadth from my scoring system. Whether that is meaningful is debatable, but breadth is not as strong as it was:

   

(This post was last modified: 2020-08-27, 09:08 PM by pcabc.)

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

Looking at last night's data I've had similar warnings about deteriorating breadth from MSCI Europe versus XETRA and the UK construction and materials sector.  A bit of a mixed bag though as breadth on the NASDAQ 100 and its breadth (on the top 100 companies, so limited) is positive, as is silver, US Tech sector, UK Equity investment instruments and UK Electronic and Electrical Engineers.  Caution needed with that last one owing to it being based on very few companies.

A bit of a mixed picture here then.  Not supposed to be a balanced overview, but showing the best and worst.
           
           

Edit: On further inspection I think that a number of indicators are so near zero lines, specific levels etc that they could easily flip multiple ways. Still, always uefull to look at the charts.

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

Sector Breadth

US sectors:
   

Momentum:
   

UK Sectors:
   

Commodities:
   

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

US Sector charts:
           
           
           
   

RE: Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis and Market Breadth - Technical Analysis

Attached are the updated charts of the RABWDB Indicator, Individual Phases, SP500 RABWDB, SP400 RABWDB and SP600 RABWDB.

To learn more about the indicator go to https://dg-swingtrading.blogspot.com/sea...bel/RABWDB



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