Garpal Gumnut
Ross Island Hotel
- Joined
- 2 January 2006
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First close below the 200 day ema since the begining of this bull market. Signs are not looking to good technically. obviously the next critical level is around 5800 so will be keenly waiting to see what happens.
Well here we are again, essentially at the bottom of the channel that's been in place since early 2003, and where each of the other main corrections has turned back into a new uptrend.
It's already broken the 200 day MA, so for me this level is now important. If it drops below the channel, my longs will be off and packed in moth balls for a while!:
Cheers,
GP
Yup.It's interesting how every time a support line is broken technical analysts come up with a new one. So if it breaks through support does that mean it wasn't really support?
I guess if you keep drawing support lines lower and lower you'll eventually get to the 'real' support line. Then you'll be able to explain the stock market's movement as a bounce off the support line....after the fact of course.
Hey here's an idea, maybe there is no support, maybe support just exists as an imaginary line on a chart, that has no relevance to movements in stock prices?
Nah couldn't be.
im at a loss as to why the XAO has fallen harder than the Dow Jones.
It's amazing how absurd our Aussie overreaction is to the US market. Look at this All Ordinaries vs the Dow Jones. Today is just ridiculous. 9.5 % down compared to 1 month ago vs 6.3% down for the Dow Jones.
OR are Aussies smarter and ahead of the US - and they're just lagging behind us....I don't think so.
Yup.
Support is only support when there's support. I prefer the term "potential" support.
There may be fundamental/psychological reasons for support, and these can be charted, but not just because someone draws a line.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- U.S. investors will look to a rash of economic reports for direction Wednesday while taking in a global stock sell off prompted by fresh credit fears.
At 4:43 a.m. ET, Nasdaq and S&P futures were lower, with a comparison to fair value pointing to a flat open. U.S. stocks have finished lower the past four sessions.
At 4:43 a.m. ET, Nasdaq and S&P futures were lower, with a comparison to fair value pointing to a flat open. U.S. stocks have finished lower the past four sessions.
The few positions I have left have mostly all just poked their noses down below their trend lines today, so any more movement down would see them gone irrespective of the index.eMark said:What would your typical scenario be? Would you sell up your stocks regardless of whether they are in a loss or profit scenario?
Dhukka,It's interesting how every time a support line is broken technical analysts come up with a new one. So if it breaks through support does that mean it wasn't really support?
I guess if you keep drawing support lines lower and lower you'll eventually get to the 'real' support line. Then you'll be able to explain the stock market's movement as a bounce off the support line....after the fact of course.
Hey here's an idea, maybe there is no support, maybe support just exists as an imaginary line on a chart, that has no relevance to movements in stock prices?
Nah couldn't be.
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