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I like to use charts and graphs to show price and volume patterns on the stocks that I'm considering buying. I like to look at about three (3) years worth of history on these stocks. This gives me a "seat-of-the-pants" gut feeling for the price and volume swings that the stock goes through.
There's really nothing scientific about looking at history charts. The past performance is a very useful tool when it comes to making your mind up about buying or selling any stock. This is especially true when searching out low-price stocks that move up and down off a 52 week low price.
Note! If you decide to get into technical analysis (not required) of the stocks you want to trade, you need to remember one thing. Many times technical analysis trading systems recognize a trend (momentum, etc) and issues a buy signal after a stock has already moved off the 52 week low.
If it has already moved up an 1/8th or 1/4 point before you get a buy signal, then you've missed a very significant amount of profit. You don't need technical analysis software to figure out when to buy a low-price cyclical stock that has a history trading up and down. You can do that.
Many of the low-price stocks that get recommended in your newsletters will not be stocks that cycle up and down. Quite a few will be stocks that are young companies with brand-new technology and products. The only problem they have is that they've not yet been discovered or promoted.
Using technical analysis on stocks in this category is much more useful. I've found that these stocks do not exhibit a long history of repetitive price swings. You can be assured that a good newsletter advisor that follows and recommends these type stocks has done quite a bit of research.
The upside profit potential these young undiscovered companies can be just as explosive as any of the stocks we'll follow that trade up and down off their 52 week low price. Again, no matter which type stock you buy, or which trading system you use, always study the fundamentals first.
You could end up buying and selling one low-price cyclical stock over and over again. You buy at the 52 week low, sell at or near the 52 week high, and wait for it fall back again, and then start all over. At some point in time, one of these same stocks can and will, take off to new highs.
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