InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 4
Posts 4127
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 03/06/2003

Re: yourbankruptcy post# 19590

Thursday, 12/04/2003 2:06:19 PM

Thursday, December 04, 2003 2:06:19 PM

Post# of 97555
yourbankruptcy, on those resistance levels -

Thank you for remembering my post! However, I should point out that that post made some assumptions and was illustrative. (You can't make a real calculation until you have a clear top.) I'll give a more accurate presentation here now that the stock put in that top. First, let's have a look at the chart:

http://stockcharts.com/gallery?AMD

The top chart gives daily information and the bottom one weekly information. (The simple chart I showed last week did not give the daily information, and an important data point was obliterated.)

Note the dip from 12.87 to 10.52 in September. The weekly chart on the bottom shows that in June the stock had a low of 5.80. The rise from 5.80 to 12.87 is 7.07 points, and the following dip was 2.35 points. That is a 33.24% decline, which shows 10.52 hit the 33% retracement point. Resistance held at that point and the stock then resumed upward movement.

(Recall that the bullish resistance points during retracement are 33%, 50% and 67%. When a stock bounces off the 33% retracement that is considered very bullish.)

OK, this establishes 10.52 as the baseline for the next leg up. The stock then went up to 18.50, a 7.98 point increase. This means the actual resistance points for the current correction are as follows:

33%: 18.50 - 1/3(7.98) = 15.84
50%: 18.50 - 1/2(7.98) = 14.51
67%: 18.50 - 2/3(7.98) = 13.18
100%: 10.52

Note that this is based on closing prices (quick intraday spikes don't count), and the calculated resistance points are approximate - they can be off a few cents in either direction. So the resistance areas are the high 15s, mid 14s and low 13s. (Resistance is considered broken if the price falls significantly beyond the calculated points, and the stock will usually continue falling to the next resistance point. On a volitile stock like this, 5% is considered significant.)

I hope this is helpful! Before using these numbers, one should verify my calculations.
Volume:
Day Range:
Bid:
Ask:
Last Trade Time:
Total Trades:
  • 1D
  • 1M
  • 3M
  • 6M
  • 1Y
  • 5Y
Recent AMD News