$AMD has been basing for almost a year. However, the Stage 3 top failed to breakdown into the Stage 4 declining phase, and it has instead formed a spring and test, and last week followed through strongly to the upside within the trading range with a sign of strength bar. So, it still needs to make progress in order to move into Stage 2 once more. So I would put it back in Stage 1 currently. As once the base moves into Phase C and D following a spring, it begins to lean towards re-accumulation over distribution in Stage 3. So becomes Stage 1 once more.
The Livermore 100 level will likely provide resistance, and it stopped there previously also. Hence, there could be a chance for some consolidation / backing up action near the top of the range prior to a breakout attempt, unless big volume comes in with a major Sign of Strength rally which would be a Stage 2 continuation breakout attempt.
The sector also continues to strengthen, and has moved up the RS tables, with strength in leading stock $NVDA the main driver - which I consider to be one of the True Market Leaders (TML) of 2021 and have a position in $NVDA in my pension account.
isatrader
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Being Australian I wanted to trade the ASX using this method. The Australian equivalent of the S&P 500 is the ASX 50. Would you use that with the Mansfield relative strength instead of the S&P?
(2021-07-08, 03:54 AM)collotennis Wrote: Being Australian I wanted to trade the ASX using this method. The Australian equivalent of the S&P 500 is the ASX 50. Would you use that with the Mansfield relative strength instead of the S&P?
Appreciate your thoughts
Hi!
I guess you are in the wrong forum section as your question belongs to "Stage Analysis Beginner Questions". Nevertheless: always (at least) start with the S&P500 in your RS comparison. Only with the S&P you can compare stocks nearly worldwide.
But of course, if youd like to, you can compare your australian stocks to your home index in a second step.
(In a third step you could also compare the stock to the sector / industry group)