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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #1 Bullish!
One
of the most bullish and dependable chart pattern with only a 6%
failure rate and an average positive rise of 41%. The average rise
was 30%. These pattern chart formations are often long enough to appear
on the weekly charts and daily charts. |
Pattern Shape - Rounded half-moon
shape. The stock price trend curves beginning from the lower left price
point upward to the top of the dome then the price trend rounds over and
moves down again to a lower price support area. |
| Trading Tactics - The
average trade for entry should occur on the right side of the dome when
the price closes above the dome or at crest for the more aggressive investors. |
WINs® -This
pattern has an upward bias and is ideal for writing covered calls and/or
leaps spreads. It is possible to time your writes and get higher premiums
for your writes. Legging into a spread would be more aggressive. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #2 Bullish! Contrary
to popular belief, more chart pattersn with right-angled descending broadening
formations break out upwards than downwards. |
Pattern Shape - Looks like a megaphone,
tilted downward, with the top the formation horizontal & bound on the
bottom by a down ward biased sloping trendline. |
| Trading Tactics - The
upper price tags must form a horizontal line. There is no consistent volume
pattern for this formation. Note! Prices can break out in either direction,
usually with a rise in volume that soon tapers off. |
WINs® - This pattern
works great with determining the strike prices for CCs and LEAPs spreads.
The back and forth movements make the option premiums higher.Watch out
for the third and fourth upmove to gapping prices! |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #3 Bullish!Ascending
scallops appear when the stock prices are moving higher over 3, 6, or more
months. |
Pattern Shape - Ascending formations
have a J shape and have two price peaks with a rounded price recession
in between. |
| Trading Tactics - Ascending scallops
often show a U-shaped volume trend that gets heavier over time. You can
average down or leg into a CC or LEAPs spreads. |
WINs® - Watch out for gaps
pass your CCs strike prices. LEAPs spreaders should go short one month
out to avoid being called out or having a run-a-way position. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #4 Bullish! This formation had
only a 6% failure rate which is outstanding. When the neckline slopes downward
at indicated, the stock performes better. |
Pattern Shape - A H&S bottom
with multiple shoulders, mutiple heads, or (rarely) both. The head is lower
than the shoulders but not very much. |
| Trading Tactics - Usually higher
volume on the left side of shoulders than than the corresponding shoulders
on the right side. Great stock to play up and down with calls and puts
or shorting. |
WINs® - Great stock to generate
considerable premiums with up the down cycles before allowing the stock
to appreciate in value and cash out. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #5 Bullish! Great CCing pattern
for stock price rise when the horn lengths are at least twice as long than
most spikes over the prior year. |
Pattern Shape - Use the weekly
profile to locate two downward spikes in the horns separated by a week
worth of time. |
| Trading Tactics - The left spike
shows higher than average volume and thus more volatility. Some horns
appear near the end of uptrends, so watch for the trend to change! |
WINs® - Horns will usually
not mark the end of the downtrends, but they will be close. Prices might
continue to drift down for $1 or so then head upward. Let the trend be
your friend! |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #6 Bullish! H&S Bottoms are
quite easy to spot and they can be very profitable. H&S bottoms meets
its price targets 83% of the time. |
Pattern Shape - A three-hump formation
with the center hump below the other two. The three humps and two minor
rises should be well defined. |
| Trading Tactics - The line slanted
to the right is the neckline. The price usually advances above the neckline
and stages an upside breakout. |
WINs® - Volume is usually highest
on the left shoulder or head and dimishes on the right shoulder. Upwared
breakouts occur usually with high volume. A low volume breakout is not
an indictor of an impending failure. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #7 Bullish! A double bottom occurs
after a downward price trend. High volume commonly occurs on the first
bottom. |
Pattern Shape - Shaped like a big
upper case W that usually takes approxiately 4 months worth of time to
complete the formation pattern. |
| Trading Tactics - 2/3s of the double
bottom throw back to the breakout price. Therefore, consider waiting for
the throwback and reversal
for prices to head upward again. |
WINs® - Bottoms humps that
are closer together usually show larger price gains and breakouts. It is
suggested that you average down or leg into positions with sideshows. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #8 Bullish! The failure rate for
falling wedges is very low at 10% while the average rise of 43% for this
indicator suggest a profitable formation to trade. The highest price after
the breakout is approx. the beginning of the trendlines. |
Pattern Shape - Two drawn downward-sloping
to the right side trendlines that eventually must intersect. Use the trendline
feature to draw the lines. Most formations have at least five touches.
3 on one side and 2 on the other side. |
| Trading Tactics - Most falling
wedges has a mininum duration of 3-wks or more. Anything less is most likely
a pennant. Formations rarely exceed 4 months long. |
WINs® - Be ready to cover when
the falling wedges come to an intersect. It may be possible to buy PUTs
as side shows for the more aggressive investors. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #9 Bullish! - This tricky patern
fails only 2% of the time! The average rise is an astounding 52% with a
likely gain between 20% to 30% for late comers. |
Pattern Shape - Stock prices
oscillates between two horizontal trendlines before breaking upward. Looks
like bridge iron support structures. |
| Trading Tactics - The
price will bounce up and down within a price range. This pattern does take
time to form and you can milk deep ITM CCs or LEAPs spreads depending on
your investing style. |
WINs® - Follow the standard
approach of writting CCs at the peaks and allowing the price to drop before
you cover cheap. This will protect your downside and free you up when the
price begins to move upward again. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #10 Bullish! The price gaps upward
after a consolidation region of several days to several weeks long.
This occurs after the stock doubles in price. |
Pattern Shape - During a flag phase,
prices can slowly drift downward as much as -20%. Prices move sideways
for 3 to 5 weeks. |
| Trading Tactics - Buy after the
breakout is the safest course of action. Wait for prices to rise above
the highest high in the flag. |
WINs® - You can buy and hold
or average down your position. Let the trend be your friend. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #1 Bearish! This patters fools
many investors. Prices usually go against the prevailing trend. In other
words, the price will eventually fall as the smart money exists. |
Pattern Shape - There
are two patterns which are related. Flags:price action bounded by
two parallel trendlines.
Pennants:the two trendlines converge to a point. |
| Trading Tactics - These formations
usually form near the midpoint of a steep, quick price trend. If you do
not have a strong advance or decline leading to the chart pattern, ignore
the formation. |
WINs® - This kind of pattern
last a total of 3-weeks max. Volume usually trends downward throughout
the formation. "Volume precedes price!" |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #2 Bearish! Prices peak, curve
downward and around, then form a lower peak. Look for previous 52-week
lows or previous lower price support levels for clues. This is a good pattern
to go short with only a 3% failure rate and an average decline of 24%. |
Pattern Shape - The price pattern
looks like a letter-J reversed. There is no discernible volume trend for
descending scallops. "Prices falls by it's own weight" is the term used
to describe the downward price drift. |
| Trading Tactics - This is considered
a short-term pattern up to 3 months time or less. |
WINs® - This is a good LEAPs
puts pattern to leg into or writing deep ITM CCs if you wish to remain
long. PUTs sideshows are also profitable. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #3 Bearish! One of the most easy
patterns to spot and one of the most profitable! Takes as long as three
months to form. |
Pattern Shape - H&S tops have
multiple heads, shoulders, or both. |
| Trading Tactics - Pull-backs average
64% and formations with downword sloping necklines or higher left shoulders
perform better. |
WINs® - When prices closes
below the neckline, a breakout occurs. For those cases with a steep, down-sloping
neckline, use the lowest trough price as the breakout point. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #4 Bearish! Prices usually trend
up to the formation. Diamond tops need not form at the top of a price chart! |
Pattern Shape - Diamond pattern
forms after a downward price trend. Trendlines surrounding the minor hights
& lows resembles a diamond. |
| Trading Tactics - Should you locate
a diamond pattern and later discover that it may be a head & shoulders
top, don't worry! Both formations are very bearish! |
WINs® - Diamonds will sometimes
form after a quick run up in prices. The reversal will usually erase these
gains and return prices to where they were before the run-up. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #5 Bearish! Descending broadening
wedges act as a consolidation of the prevailing trend. The volume tends
to increase over time. |
Pattern Shape - Price pattern looks
like a megaphone titled downward. Both trendlines slope downward with the
lower trendline having a steeper slope. |
| Trading Tactics - This formation
acts as a consolidation of the trend. If prices are moving down, prices
usually continue down after a downside breakout. |
WINs® - If the formation is
especially broad, buy as the lower trendline and sell at the top. Alternatively,
sell short at the top trendline once prices are heading down and close
the position after it rebounds off the lower trendline. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #6 Bearish! Prices trend for as
long as 3 months up to the formation then oscillate with pull-backs that
aver 55% between two horizontal trendlines before breaking out downward. |
Pattern Shape - Two parallel trendlines
for the highs and the lows.Looks like bridge iron support structures. |
| Trading Tactics - The actualThe
price will bounce up and down within a price range. This pattern does take
time to form and you can milk deep ITM CCs or LEAPs spreads depending on
your investing style. |
WINs® - Follow the standard
approach of writting CCs at the peaks and allowing the price to drop before
you cover cheap. This will protect your downside and free you up when the
price begins to move upward again. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #7 Bearish!
The price trend begins as a negative downtrend that leads to a bounce forming
a megaphone appearance with higher highs and lower lows that widends over
time. Then, the breakout is upward usually off the moving average line. |
Pattern Shape - Looks
like a bull-horn and usually takes less than three months to form. Volume
usually follows price; rises as price rises, falls when prices fall. |
| Trading Tactics - Partial
rise at the end of the formation predicts a downside breakout 67% of the
time and partial declines predicts an upside breakout 80% of the time. |
WINs® - Once
recognizing a broadening formation, go long at the low and buy after the
stock makes its turn at the low. Likewise, go short at the high prices
start heading down at the top. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #8 Bearish!
Prices rise steadily along a trendline, bump up, round over, then
declines through the trendline and continues downward. |
Pattern Shape -
If the trendline is flat or nearly so, it is not a good bump-and-rund reversal
candidate. The typical trendline was a 30-degree angled line. |
| Trading Tactics - Waiting
for the breakout improves investment performance. The close should be above
the down-sloping trendline before you buy the stock. |
WINs® - When
prices rises to the old high, consider selling it if the the stock shows
weakness. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #9 Bearish! The
price trend begins as a positive uptrend that leads to a pull-back forming
a megaphone appearance with higher highs and lower lows that widends over
time. Then, the breakout is upward usually off the moving average line. |
Pattern Shape - Looks
like a bull-horn and usually takes less than three months to form. Volume
usually follows price; rises as price rises, falls when prices fall. |
| Trading Tactics - Partial
rise at the end of the formation predicts a downside breakout 65% of the
time and partial declines predicts an upside breakout 86% of the time. |
WINs® - The
breakout can occur in either direction and, in several cases, prices move
horizontally for several months before staging a definitive breakout. |
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PATTERN
CHARACTERISTICS
| #10 Bearish!
Prices trend downward then form lower highs and higher lows following two
sloping trendlines that eventually intersect. The breakout is downward
with a 57% average pullback. |
Pattern Shape - Prices
trend downward then form lower highs and higher lows following two sloping
tredlines that eventually intersect. Looks like a triangle on its side. |
| Trading Tactics - Triangles
with high volume breakouts show larger losses. Pullbacks are more likely
to occur after a high volume breakout. |
WINs® - Unknows
ahead of time. You must wait for the breakout before investing. |
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TECHNICAL TERMS DEFINED:
| FAILURE
RATE: |
Percentage of formations that do not work as
expected. The numbers apply to formations once they stage a breakout (confirming
the formation). |
REVERSAL
OR
CONSOLIDATION: |
The letter R appears if the majority of formations act as reversals
of the price trend and the letter C appears for consolidations. If both
R and C appear in an entry, then the chart pattern has no overriding majority
of either type. |
THROWBACK,
PULLBACK: |
A throwback is an upside breakout that returns price to the top of
the formation or trendline boundary. A pullback is a downside breakside
breakout that returns prices to the bottom of the formation or trendline
boundary |
LIKELY
RISE
OR
DECLINE |
Computed by measuring the individual percentage rise or decline for
each formation and tabulating a frequency distribution of the results.
The most likely rise or decline is the range with the highest frequency
and usually excludes the rightmost column. |