Profit Triggers Oct16
Profit Triggers Oct16
Profit Triggers Oct16
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.
Preface
2.
3.
4.
11
15
20
26
29
31
35
41
46
51
56
5.
61
6.
Conclusion
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PREFACE
Hi, I am Apurva Sheth.
I would like to congratulate you on taking your first step towards learning the art and science of
short-term trading in stocks.
I am confident that this is going to be an extremely knowledgeable and profitable journey for you.
By joining me today and reading this guide, I believe that you have already taken the most critical
step of your journey i.e. understanding the immense money-making potential that lies in this
investing approach and willingness to spend some time and effort to learn the tricks of trade.
Over the course of this guide, you will learn the basics of technical analysis, charting, and even
understand why a particular stock price moves in one direction rather than the other amongst
other things.
My goal will be to equip you with all the tools and techniques that professional traders utilize to
book quick profits from the stock market so that you could book regular profits across all market
conditions too.
Yes, irrespective of what you mightve heard, I strongly believe technical analysis is one of the most
lucrative investment strategies out there!
And as you have decided to join me on this journey, I take it as my responsibility to teach you
everything that I have learned over the years.
Ive already done all the work for you and have distilled all the knowledge into this guide in a simple
and easy to understand language.
So, do go through each and every word of this guide and Im confident that you can become a
better, more knowledgeable and independent trader.
And heres what I promise
If you read through this guide in detail and learn all the techniques Ill be sharing with you in the
next few pages, I see absolutely no reason why you cant book 6% - 20% profits in a matter of
weeks
Regularly!
Okay, now I understand thats a high claim and you might doubt on whether you can achieve that
yourself
But trust me when I say that it takes just a few minutes every week to become an independent and
wealthy trader.
I have personally done it before and now Im going to share everything with you!
Of course, were going to have ups and downs but rest assured Im here to guide you every step
of the way!
Why me?
Okay, this is a tough task without sounding pompous
But it needs to be done.
So, as you must know by now, I am a certified Chartered Market Technician and a member of
Market Technician Association (USA).
I have previously guided professionals at banks, mutual funds, insurance companies and even
foreign institutional investors (FIIs) make quick profits from the stock market by following the exact
same strategy Im revealing to you today.
And the only reason Im doing this is because I want you and other professional traders to be on a
level playing field when it comes to booking short term trading profits.
If youre willing to put in some effort from your end to learn this investment approach, I can almost
guarantee that this will be the most lucrative investment strategy you couldve ever seen.
So, without further adieu and with all my best wishes for a wealthy trading future
Lets Begin!
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January 2008 i.e. downtrend till October 2008, sideways till March 2009 and uptrend till November
2010.
Nifty Price Chart showing 3 clear trends
The old Chinese proverb a picture is worth a thousand words is best suited to describe usefulness
of charts.
All throughout this guide I will show you how charts can add a different dimension to our trading
and investment analysis. I will make sure that it is less tedious and passively even more profitable
to learn and earn along with charts.
I often see my friends or colleagues getting into an argument over which one is a better approach
while making money from stocks fundamentals or technicals.
I think the whole argument here is flawed.
It should be Fundamentals and Technicals rather than Fundamentals v/s Technicals.
Why should we accept one and reject other. When we can have the best of both.
A marriage of both will work wonders. In fact, I believe in combining both and bringing the best of
both worlds together.
One strategy which I follow during the quarterly results season is keep a track of stocks that are
coming out with good numbers. Once the initial frenzy is over, these stocks normally consolidate
for a while. I look out for opportunities when such a stock in consolidation phase could breakout.
This approach enables me to get into a fundamentally strong stock at the right moment.
Any approach which may tell you with a high degree of confidence about the likely future of the
market shouldnt be neglected. And technicals definitely help you with that.
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If I were to sum up this aspect, history repeats itself is what comes to my mind. It is the first basic
premise of Technical Analysis.
Second is "market action discounts everything".
This means anything that can possibly affect the price fundamentally, politically, psychologically, or
otherwise - is actually reflected in the current price. A study of price action reflects all the shifts in
supply and demand. If demand exceeds supply, prices should rise. If supply exceeds demand, prices
should fall. This action is the basis of all economic and fundamental forecasting.
A technician then turns this statement around to arrive at a conclusion that if prices are rising, for
whatever specific reasons, demand must exceed supply and fundamentals must be bullish. If prices
fall, then fundamentals must be bearish.
The third premise is that prices move in trends. The whole purpose of charting price action is to
identify trends in early stages of their development for the purpose of trading in the direction of
those trends. A trend once established will continue in the same direction until it reverses.
Now having understood the basic premise of Technical Analysis, let me just show you in a simplistic
format what it is comprised of. The picture below shows three subjects that combine to form
Technical Analysis.
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Its an easy trick to tell whether you would like Technical Analysis or not.
If you liked all the three fields at school or college then you would like Technical Analysis as well.
But dont worry if you were bad at any of these. I was bad in geometry at school but still fared well
at Technical Analysis (in our journey I will tell you all about my successes and, more importantly,
failures). You can also develop a liking for the subject if you are willing to learn.
The most important component of all is Psychology. It strives to find answers to why people feel,
think and act the way they do.
I had explained how a simple transaction of buying groceries takes place earlier. We know that the
degree by which buyers and sellers decide to raise or lower their prices, directly affects the
transaction price. Wouldn't it be a plus if we could tell which side is in a better position to hold
command over the prices? Such an observation would reveal a lot about the anticipated price
shifts. And thats what we are concerned about in Technical Analysis.
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The process of plotting trendlines, identifying chart patterns and naming them such as rectangles
and triangles draws the link between technical analysis and geometry.
A technical indicator is actually a mathematical formula that is first computed and then plotted on
a chart. Moving Averages are the simplest form of indicators which are derived mathematically.
Other methods like projecting targets from a pattern, computing Fibonacci projections and
retracements are all form of mathematical calculations.
I think by now you must be clear how all three are inter-related and how they apply to TA.
Now that you have thoroughly understood the philosophy behind technical analysis, Im sure all of
you are keen to see how it actually works.
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This is what a basic technical chart looks like. It is ideally divided in two parts.
The upper part is where (1) price data is plotted while the lower half is where (2) indicator is
plotted.
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In most cases you will find volume plotted below the price.
On the top left corner of the chart you will find the (3) name of the ticker alongside other details
like open, high, low, close and % change compared to the previous period.
The (4) price and (5) indicator values are plotted on the Y axis placed on the right hand side.
The (6) Indicator name is visible on the left hand side below the ticker in a new panel.
The (7) date or time are plotted on the X axis.
Also note that the (8) time frame that is chosen for charting price is mentioned at the bottom of the
chart alongside X axis in the rightmost corner.
Dly for daily, Wkl for weekly, Mon for monthly.
I hope that was clear. I know it seems like a lot of variables, but once you get a hang of these
indicators they will seem as familiar as an old friend.
Now, let me walk you through the various types of charts that are commonly available, and tell you
which one is my favourite.
1. Line Chart
These are the first charts that we come across in our geometry class at school. They are created
by plotting the closing prices of the period selected. For example, on a daily time frame a line
will be plotted between the daily closing prices to create a line chart. On a weekly time frame
weekly closing prices will be used, on monthly time frame monthly closing prices will be used
and so on.
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2. Bar Chart
They are also known as OHLC charts. OHLC stands for Open High Low Close respectively. Bar
charts show the range of the timeframe selected. For example, on a daily chart every single bar
will show that days range right from high to low.
Bar charts are normally plotted in black & white but some people, like me, prefer red and green.
However, I have rarely used bar charts in my career and prefer candlestick charts over them as
these are visually appealing and easier to read.
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3. Candlestick Chart
Japanese rice traders have been using this technique for ages and the western world discovered
this technique later in the eighties. Candlesticks are easier to interpret. It gives the same open
high low close data that bar charts give but in a much more appealing format.
Lets look at how a candle is formed.
The adjoining figure shows a green bullish candle. It means the closing price is
above the opening price on the time frame selected. Mind you, a bullish candle
can form even on a day when prices have fallen compared to previous day. The
nature of the candle (bullish or bearish) is decided based on todays close with
respect to todays open and not todays close with respect to yesterdays close.
Source: wikipedia
The adjoining figure shows a red bearish candle. It means the closing price is
below the opening price on the time frame selected. A bearish candle can form
even on a day when prices have risen compared to previous day. For example: A bearish candle would form even when the stock may have opened gap up
today and closed below todays open but above the previous days close. In this
Source: wikipedia
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case the stock has registered gains on a day-on-day basis but the nature of the candle will be
considered bearish as it closed below its open.
Nifty Candlestick Chart Since March 2014
This is a candlestick chart of Nifty since March 2014. You can see that it looks nicer than the
other two I have shown above.
It is also easier to read. Notice the election results day gap up in Nifty when the index opened at
7,270, moved up to the high of 7,563, but ended the day at 7,203. This was a gain of 80 points
compared to the previous days close of 7,123. But, the daily candle was still marked as red in
color because the close is below the open.
Apart from this the candle chart also give details about the days range which a line chart cannot as
it considers only closing prices for plotting. The bar chart adds more depth and value compared to a
line chart but the focus is only on the days range rather than the open and close.
Thus, for me candlestick charts are clear-cut winners when compared to the other two.
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2. Daily Chart
A day represents a complete cycle of events in our lives right from sunrise to sunset. We
wake up every morning, perform our duties during the day and retire from all the chores in
the night and the cycle moves on. We live our lives in parts and a day is the best
representation of such parts.
An advantage of looking at daily charts is that it makes your trading less emotional as it adds
only one new piece of information every day. So you can sit back and take a prudent
decision without worrying for tracking price change every minute. I have personally
observed and learned that focusing on daily charts helps you avoid two biggest mistakes a
common trader does i.e. overtrading and overanalyzing.
Most market observers including fundamental analysts, financial media etc. gauge prices on
a day-to-day basis. Even the NAV of a mutual fund is calculated on a day-to-day basis.
Psychologically, daily price movements is what affects the most to anyone in the financial
markets.
The charts that you saw earlier were all daily charts. I also prefer daily price charts over all
other time frames.
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3. Weekly Chart
Weekly charts plot a whole weeks price data. So a weekly candle opening price would be
Mondays open, and close would be Fridays closing level. The highest and lowest that the
stock or index may have travelled during the whole week will become the high and low for
the weekly candle.
The chart that I have attached below is a weekly chart and it shows data for the same period
that the daily chart posted above shows. You must have noticed that the number of candles
have reduced in the weekly chart and it is also less sensitive to price movements compared
to the daily chart. Thats because it combines 5 days data points into 1 week. This helps
focus more on the trend rather than its sensitivity.
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4. Monthly Chart
Monthly charts are prepared using the same principles that are used for preparation of
weekly charts. The opening price of the first trading day of a months open is considered as
the opening level for month.
And the last trading days close is considered as closing level for the month. These charts are
mostly used by investors with a longer horizon. There are charts even higher than monthly
time frame ones like quarterly, half-yearly and yearly but unless your investment horizon
matches Warren Buffetts you dont need to look at these.
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Time in Position
Expected Returns in % per trade Trend Determination Entry & Exit Points
Months to years
Monthly
Weekly
Weeks to months
12%-30%
Weekly
Daily
Swing trader
3-20 days
6% - 20%
Daily
Hourly
Day trader
Hours
0.5% - 2%
Hourly
10 minute
Micro trader
5 minute
1 minute
Most people normally fall into the category of swing trader or intermediate trader. I have spent
most of my career in recommending ideas to these two group of market participants, and if you are
into this kind of trading, then this is the perfect platform for you!
Okay, so lets assume you are a swing trader interested in trading ideas that generate returns of
anywhere between 6-20% in a period of 3-20 days.
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The chart that you should pick up for your analysis or trend determination is a daily chart. All your
trading decisions should be based on this chart alone. The chart you pick up for trend
determination will become your Chart of Choice (CoC). Now once you are convinced that the
stock you have chosen is worth your hard-earned money
STOP
Dont be in a hurry to place an order with your broker. Just hold on to your excitement and put your
phone back where you picked it up from.
Now once you are settled just jot down your points/arguments for entering the stock.
Once you are done with it, just check one degree higher time frame chart above your CoC to
CONFIRM whether this chart also reinforces the same view you had about the stock when you
analyzed it on your CoC.
In this case we will check the weekly chart of the stock and confirm our views on a higher time
frame.
If it doesnt confirm, then its not the best of things to go ahead with this stock.
On the other hand, If you are convinced that the stock is worth your money, just hold on to your
breath and check a lower degree time frame chart for best entry opportunity.
A lower degree chart in this case would be an intraday chart.
My favorite timeframe on an intraday chart is 75 minutes.
The 75 minute timeframe chart divides our market hours which start from 9.15 am to 3.30 pm (375
minutes) into exactly 5 equal-sized candles. This helps me get a better picture for the day and
score over the hourly candles, which breaks unequally at the end.
In case I want to move further down on the timeframe, I choose a 25 min candle which divides 75
min into 3 equal parts or a 15 min candle which divides 75 min into 5 equal parts.
Check for a best entry opportunity on intraday charts and then finally place an order with your
broker, who will be eager to buy at the market rate but you would stay firm with your price levels
and not get influenced with his sweet talk.
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Now, I will show you how this actually works on a chart. And how you can avoid misinterpretations.
I have attached a linear scale chart of Nifty right from 1994. Just check the price scale carefully. All
throughout this scale price are equidistant from each other. A move from 1,000 to 1,500 is marked
equally as a move from 2,500 to 3,000, when in percentage terms they are a lot different.
NIFTY Line Chart On A Linear Scale Since 1994
The following chart is a Log scale chart of Nifty from 1994. Take note that here prices are at unequal
distance because they are plotted based on percentage change rather than absolute change. Also
notice the period from 1994 to 2003 in both the charts. On linear scale it looks like market is
consolidating in a narrow range when in reality it had actually gone through lot of volatility. The
Dotcom Boom saw Nifty move from a low of 800 in December 1998 to a high of 1,800 in February
2000. That is more than double in a matter of 15 months! This rally is hardly visible in the linear
chart. I have marked this period in a rectangular box on the log chart.
A linear chart can be somewhat deceptive at times. A 1,000 point move is much more significant to
an investor if the index is at 800. Than if the index is at 8,000. The deception can rise multifold in
case of stocks who have rallied more than 4 or 5 times in a short span of time.
Have a look at most rally in Nifty beginning in February 2014 from 6,300 to 8,600. On linear chart
this looks like a rocket launched into the stratosphere while on the log chart it is much more
gradual.
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Many a times in official gatherings I face a common question, which scale do you use?
And my vote has always been for log scale. A linear scale is useful only when the price range on
your screen is not more than 10%. In any cases higher than this it is always preferable to use a log
scale.
Log scale facilitates direct comparison of high and low priced stocks. And makes it easier to choose
the one offering greater percentage profits on the capital employed.
By default I always have a log scale on my screen. When I am on a smaller time frame a log scale or
a linear scale wont make much of a difference. And when on a higher time frame log scale serves
the purpose of showing the correct picture. So for me log is always better than linear.
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Quite often people make their investments based on advice given by experts on one of the blue
channels. The problem with following this advice is that theres a vacuum between the expert and
advice seeker. In most of the cases both are operating with a different time span in mind.
Television is an excellent mode to disseminate information quickly but when it comes to giving
advice it fails miserably. One because it cannot cater to specific needs of such a large audience.
Second it has a time constraint. (They cant allow you to speak more than a few seconds on a
question) Having been there and done that I know that anchors of business channels will want to
shove you either in the bull camp or bear camp. When sometimes it is more sensible to sit on the
sidelines and wait for more information/data. But then they cant sit idle during this period. Their
advertisers wont pay them if channels dont come out with an interesting story every day.
I dont blame the anchors for this but its the medium of communication that is at fault. Anyways in
either case the investor is at a loss.
When both these things are combined. Lack of clarity of the trend length and seeking general
advice from television channels. You end up confusing yourselves and eventually curse the expert
for his advice.
Now, let me offer a solution to these problems.
I will start with trend. A trend is a time measurement of the direction in price levels covering
different time spans. There are many trends. Three most widely used are primary, secondary and
minor.
(Charles Dow who developed the Dow Jones Industrial Averages is considered father of technical
analysis, classified trends into these 3 parts.)
He called primary trend as the tide, this is the trend that defines the long-term direction (1 year
to several years). Primary trend is the major underlying trend in the market.
Secondary or Intermediate Trend are the waves, this is medium term movements or departures
from the primary trend (weeks to months)
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Lastly minor or short trends are the ripples, they generally show nervousness with rapid up or
down swings. (1 week to 6 weeks). With the advent of computers intraday trends have also gained
massive fan following.
When you apply these principles to a standard 4 year business cycle you get a market cycle model
which is illustrated in the chart below. In this cycle a primary trend may last between 9 months to 2
years. Intermediate trend may last between 6 weeks to 9 months. And minor trend will last
between 2 weeks to 6 weeks. Mind you all stocks may not strictly follow this model but these are
general guidelines which one can apply while analysis.
The Market Cycle Model
For an investor to grow his wealth safely and steadily it is very much essential to identify these
trends and changes in trends at an early stage and maintain their positions until the trend has
reversed.
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But how do we decide it objectively which of these 3 trends is currently active on a particular stock
or index.
Peak - Trough Analysis is the simplest of all tools available to determine the trend.
You know it very well that stock prices do not rise or fall in a straight line. Price moves are more or
less similar to a snake crawling in the sands leaving behind a trail similar to the one illustrated
below.
Peaks & Troughs
The chart I have shown above is an example of a stock with rising peaks and troughs or simply put it
is forming a higher high and a higher low subsequently. These highs or lows can be separated from
each other by a few days, weeks or months. This is immaterial with respect to ongoing trend as long
as it is forming higher highs and higher lows the trend (up in this case) is considered as valid.
This principle applies similarly to a stock trending downwards. Here we will look for lower peaks
and lower troughs. The picture I have illustrated below shows both an uptrend as well as
downtrend based on peak trough analysis.
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A stock can also move in neither of these direction and stay sideways. Here the peaks and troughs
will be at same levels or within the previous peaks or troughs. Some traders avoid trading when the
stock is sideways while some savvy traders will even trade within these ranges once they get a hang
of the levels from where price is likely to change direction.
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I have illustrated above a peak trough analysis of Nifty on weekly charts for you to see. Do have a
look at it and try applying the same principle on a chart of a stock you hold.
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However, 99% of People Get This Wrong. Most newbie technicians begin by drawing trendlines
randomly on a chart and ultimately end up with wrong interpretations. If you remember lessons
from your geometry class, we need two points to draw a line. Same rule applies while drawing
trendlines. I often see people randomly drawing line that touches only one point. Then there are a
few other who use two points to draw a trendline. This method of drawing a trendline is correct but
their interpretation out of this isnt as correct.
The general rule that I follow is that after drawing trendlines from two points the trendline should
touch and bounce back from a third point to be considered valid. This is a mistake which even
seasoned market veterans do when using technical analysis. They would rarely check the validity of
the trendline that they have drawn and expect the price to bounce off from the third point itself. It
may very well do so but expecting it always isnt correct. The probability of price bouncing back
from fourth or fifth point is higher than a trendline which is just drawn with two points. So the
more the number of bottoms (uptrend) and tops (downtrend) formed near a trendline the more
important a trendline becomes.
Nifty Intraday 25 Min Chart Showing Valid & Invalid Trendlines
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In the chart illustrated above I have drawn an uptrend line from the low of 31st October 2014 to the
low of 20th November 2014. The trendline is drawn correctly with two points but its validity is not
confirmed until it touches a third point and bounces from there. So one should wait for the price
action to unfold itself instead of anticipating a bounce back when price starts trading closer to this
trendline. Prices could have bounced up again from this trendline however we would be banking
more on chance than on probabilities.
On the contrary have a look at down trendline that I have drawn from 5th December 2014 to 11th
December 2014. I would consider this as much more valid than the earlier one. Third point touched
this trendline on 12th December 2014 and confirmed the validity. After this point we can look up to
this trendline for valid signals. Thats exactly what it gave on 15th December 2014 as index reversed
twice after touching this trendline and resumed its downtrend. Eventually even this trendline was
broken as index rallied above it however it did its job and gave a correct signal.
Apart from this there are a few other concepts which I apply to judge the validity of a trendline. If a
trendline is held for a longer time without being penetrated by prices its significance/validity
increases. In the chart attached below I have drawn a down trendline from August 2008 peak to
October 2009 peak on DLF. Its been more than 6 years and this trendline is still valid.
Down Trendline Drawn On DLF Weekly Chart Since August 2008
Another important factor is that the angle of ascent should not be too steep. Sometimes stocks go
through phases of exceptional rise at such times even valid trendlines are penetrated quite often by
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price. I have illustrated this below in the daily chart of JK Tyre. The stock has rallied 10 times in the
last 14 months. All the trendlines that I have drawn on the chart below are valid and have touched
more than 3 points but eventually all of them were penetrated by price. A sideways consolidation
followed after the rally but later on the stock resumed its uptrend. In such cases these trendlines
will have little forecasting value and may leave you frustrated for getting out of the stock too soon.
A trend line is a straight line that connects two or more price points and then extends into the
future from which the price may bounce back.
Trendlines are important tool in a technicians toolbox and once you have learned the art of
drawing valid trendlines you can move on to Trend Channels.
A trend channel is nothing but price action contained between two parallel trendlines.
Uptrend lines are series of ascending bottoms in a rising market joined together by a straight line.
When you draw a line parallel to this uptrend line by connecting successive peaks you get a rising
channel.
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Downtrend lines are drawn by connecting tops of a descending series of rally peaks together by a
straight line. When you draw a line parallel to this line by connecting successive bottoms you get a
falling channel.
Rising And Falling Channel
Now that you know drawing a trendline requires two points and validating it requires prices to
touch and bounce back from the third point on that trendline. This line then becomes our Main
Trendline. When you draw another line parallel to the main trendline off successive peaks (uptrend)
and successive bottoms (downtrend) you get a rising channel and falling channel respectively.
The chart illustrated above shows the same concept. As long as price advances and trades within
the green channel, the trend is considered bullish and till it remains in the red channel it is
considered bearish.
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people who have completely lost faith in any sort of research methodology be it fundamentals or
technical. They loosely claim that nothing works in markets. It is just gambling.
It is not the tool or methodology which is at fault but the way in which we use is what matters.
Before applying a particular method we should understand its application and limitations. It applies
to support and resistances as well. I feel they are one of the best tools that a trader as well as an
investor can use but due to the bad name it has got many people avoid using it.
Secondly people use them with half-baked knowledge and eventually end up with wrong
conclusions. But, I want to re-emphasize that these are the best tools and so I will be devoting
substantial time explaining these to you.
So lets just start understanding what are supports and resistances and the psychology behind the
same.
So, what is a support?
Support is the price level at which demand is thought to be strong enough to prevent the price
from declining further. The logic dictates that as the price declines towards support and gets
cheaper, buyers become more inclined to buy and sellers become less inclined to sell. By the time
the price reaches the support level, it is believed that demand will overcome supply and prevent
the price from falling below support.
And what is a resistance?
Resistance is the price level at which selling is thought to be strong enough to prevent the price
from rising further. The logic dictates that as the price advances towards resistance, sellers become
more inclined to sell and buyers become less inclined to buy. By the time the price reaches the
resistance level, it is believed that supply will overcome demand and prevent the price from rising
above resistance.
Let me explain this in detail with the help of an illustration.
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The stock halts in the midst of a fall and jumps back to point A and moves back to point B. The
reason behind this fall can be anything. We are not concerned about that. All we are doing here is
simply Observing that prices are moving lower.
At point A selling was strong enough to prevent any further advance while at Point B the demand
was strong enough which resulted to a pullback to point C. Now at point C buyers who had bought
at point B start booking profits while those who had bought at point A exit with no profit no loss.
This results in a supply zone getting created at the trendline drawn along the points A and C. This
becomes our resistance.
Now prices start tumbling again due to selling pressure from market participants pushing the prices
down to point D. People who had bought in at point B made a good gain when they sold at point C,
so when price reach similar levels again at point D they buy. There might be people who didnt sell
at Point C after buying at Point B and may want to average at same levels. Thus interaction of all
these people push prices up again to a higher level. This results in to a demand zone getting created
at the trendline drawn along the points B and D. This becomes our support.
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As I said earlier market is made up of lots of participants and they may have different reason to act
to prices in the way they do. We should not bother about that, the fact that prices are moving and
reacting to certain levels is what is important for technician.
Previous Supports Now Become Resistances
Now supports and resistances work wonderfully for a while as prices react perfectly to the supply
and demand zones until Point I. Prices fail to reach the previous resistance zone and reverses
direction earlier than expected and penetrate the support line BD. They move lower to Point K and
bounce back to Point L but couldnt move any further up and move below the Point K (Dow Theory
Signal). The people who were enjoying buying at support levels (B, D, F & H) and exiting at higher
levels are now in a losing position for the first time. They may be worried a little. Some of them may
exit at Point L but many continue to hold their positions. They may panic once the stock moves
below Point K. And may stumble to exit their positions leading to a fall till point M. Fresh demand
emerges at Point M as people may see value in the stock (which is again very subjective) and
pushes the prices upwards. However, all through this there are many buyers who had entered at
Point B, D, F, H & J who are hoping and praying for the prices to come up to their buying level so
that they can exit at least with a no profit no loss. This makes Point N as a very strong resistance as
many sellers are waiting for their prices thus reinforcing the previous support level to a resistance
level now.
One key point to learn from this is that the reason why support and resistance levels work is
more psychological than fundamental. People remember their prices at which they buy or sell. This
price becomes their Anchor and they make their decisions based on this anchor.
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Another lesson to learn from this is that people who were enjoying trading within these range and
especially those who had entered at either of Points B, D, F, H & J are perplexed and are even
frustrated when they see prices breaking a support zone. They would doubt support and resistance
theory when prices would penetrate the support levels.
Let me tell you that support and resistance levels are like floors of a building. Having a floor at a
particular level does not mean that the elevator has to stop at each and every level. The elevator
can and does directly go from 20th Floor to 15th Floor. It may not stop anywhere in between. The
same principle applies to stock prices. This is the half-baked knowledge I referred to you earlier.
Most technicians fall into this trap even people following advice on support and resistance should
understand this thoroughly. No level is sacrosanct in markets. Like records, supports and resistance
are meant to be broken one day or other.
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challenge for the bulls for months and years to come. Mount 21K was eventually conquered after a
failed attempt in November 2010 and after lot of efforts in November 2013.
Sensex: Conquering Mount 21k...
The chart I have illustrated below is much before the 2008 top, it was in April 1992 when the
Harshad Mehtas stock scam broke out and Sensex topped out at 4546. This level remained a strong
resistance for a long time. This level was challenged twice in September 1994 and in August 1997,
but bulls couldnt drive it substantially higher.
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There are many more example like this. The best one of them is of Hindustan Unilever Ltd.
HUL Wakes Up From A Decade Long Slumber
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HUL was a star performer from 1995 to 2000. It was amongst one of the very few stocks to have
rallied 6 times during this period when the Sensex was going through a dull phase. HUL topped out
at 280 in July 1999. Six months later it hit a high of 323 and closed at 286 in February 2000. It tried
again in June 2000 but couldnt close beyond the previous high and settled at 283. The stock had to
go through a 4 year long bear market and approximately another 2 years to come closer to the
previous highs. It closed at 289 in April 2006. Supply was strong enough to thwart it down. Every
other attempt met with selling pressure until June 2011 when the stock finally woke up from a
decade long slumber.
IOB: Support Down South...
Indian Overseas Bank Ltd. witnessed tremendous growth from 2001 to 2004. It rallied from 8 Rs. to
75 Rs. during this period. A correction followed soon halving the price to about 37 odd levels. The
stock resumed its uptrend and even crossed 200 levels by 2008. The trend reversed and pushed the
stock back to 37 levels by March 2009. The previous low acted as support and halted the fall.
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Reliance Infrastructure took over BSES in 2002. It rallied four time from a low of 200 in October
2002 to a high of 800 in March 2004. It traded in a range until June 2006 when it broke below 400
levels. The stock soon boarded a superfast metro train and rallied more than 7 times within the
next 18 months. However, this train went out of control by January 2008 and crash landed to 350
levels by October 2008. All the correction that followed afterwards have ended in the range of 300
to 400. I selected this example to show that stocks do not necessarily reverse direction from the
exact support (or resistance) levels. Technical Analysis is not a perfect science. You have to allow
some flexibility in your analysis. The stocks/index will not reverse from exact levels but somewhere
near it. How much margin of safety you want will depend on what kind of a trader/investor you are.
It may not be easy for everyone to see the stock dropping from 400 to 300 which is a fall of 25%.
Given these limitations, supports and resistance levels can still give you valuable insights before you
decide to trade or invest.
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A range becomes stronger if either side of this range is held more no. of times. Once a trading range
is established one can buy at lower end of this range and sell at higher end of this range. Obviously
this is not as simple as it looks. While you may enjoy trading these ranges, sometimes the stock can
do the exact opposite of what you may expect it to do. You can be caught on the wrong foot. It may
also take a longer time to move from the lower end to the upper end of the range. Trading range
bound stocks takes a lot of patience. Those who are looking for quick profits may be disappointed
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by the time it takes for the stock to move its full potential. Despite all this, trading range bound
stock can give consistent returns to traders. Investors who may have identified that their stock has
entered into a trading range can utilize it to their advantage by adding stock at lower end of this
range and selling at higher end of the range. They can continue to do so until the stock remains
range bound. By trading these ranges they can bring down their cost of the original investment.
Other savvy traders/investors who have knowledge of options can employ trading strategies
specifically designed to gain from such movements.
Now I will show you this with the help of a couple of real life examples.
ONGC: Stagnant from one election to another
ONGC is one of the best example of a range-bound stock. It closed with almost 30% gains in the
week when election results were announced in May 2009. Since then the stock entered in a broad
trading range from 240 to 340 and decisively moved out of it only 5 years later when 2014 Lok
Sabha election results were announced. (Only exception to this was in September 2010 when the
stock closed outside upper end of this range at around 360 levels for a couple of weeks)
On a close look one can observe that even within this broad range of 100 Rs. there are sub ranges
which can roughly be divided in to 50 Rs. The bottom of this range (green line) is 240 Rs. which has
acted as support throughout these 5 years. Middle band (orange line) of this range is 290 which
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acted as resistance in the latter half of 2011 and whole of 2012. The top of this range (red line) is 50
Rs. above the middle band, at 340. The yellow line which marks the September 2010 top of 360.
After the recent election results the stock broke above the top of this range and hit a high of 470,
however it has failed to hold there and has once again reacted sharply down towards level of
around 340.
Reliance: Shattered Dreams
Many people have sentimental attachment to Reliance Industries. They have been holding it in
their portfolios for a long time. I have seen many families where this stock is handed over by one
generation to another. However, Reliance has shattered dreams of many of these families over the
last 5 years. It has also disappointed the institutions as all of them are holding Reliance in either of
their schemes. Reliance being a heavyweight is held in decent quantities across institutions. It has
consistently remained an underperformer when the markets have hit new highs.
It has been trading in a broad range of 1100-700 over the last 5 years. There has been some
instances when it has overshot these ranges (mostly on the higher side) during this period.
However, I have used levels which were respected most of the times and could easily be used while
making trading/investing decisions. Though the stock hit a high of 1267 on the back of election
results in May 2009, the most time that it has traded is within a range of 1100 to 900 from May
2009 to June 2011. Once the stock broke this range it traded in a new range of 700 to 900 from
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June 2011 to March 2014. This time again it overshot the 1100 mark and moved to a high of 1145.
However it didnt sustain there for too long and slipped back to the middle band of the broad range
around 900 levels.
Hero Moto Corp: Breaking Out Of The Range
Hero Moto Corp traded in a range of 1,400 to 2,200 from May 2009 to May 2014. I have split this
range in two halves. The upper half ranges from 2,200 to 1,800. Lower half ranges from 1,800 to
1,400. It spent most of the time in the upper half of the range during this period. Eventually it did
breakout of this range and headed higher in a rising channel.
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I came across this chart of South Indian Bank in January 2014. You can clearly observe that it traded
religiously within a well-defined band of 20-29 since July 2010. Even within this band there were
sub-bands which acted as support and resistance at various occasions. One could have easily made
use of these bands to garner handsome returns on a consistent basis.
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You are probably thinking, what this has got to do with technicals.
Rest Assured. I have aptly put it where it should be as todays topic is very
much related to this.
But before I move on lets talk about these three words. Reduce - is using
natural resources wisely, and using less than usual in order to avoid
Source: Wikipedia
waste. Reuse - is to use an item again after it has been used. Recycle - is a process to change waste
materials into new products to prevent waste of potentially useful materials. All of these three
components are equally important to eliminate waste and protect environment.
The component that we are going to talk about is Reuse. An item can be used again for the same
function or in a new-life form where it can used for a different function. The same concept applies
to trendline, supports and resistance.
I spoke to you about trendlines earlier in this guide. Basically there are two types of trendlines. An
uptrend line which can be drawn by joining series of ascending bottoms in a rising market by a
straight line. A downtrend line can be drawn by joining the tops of a descending series of rally
peaks.
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After drawing trendlines from two points the trendline should touch and bounce back from a third
point to be considered valid. When prices bounce back from fourth or fifth point of this trendline, it
is considered that the uptrend line is lending support or in case of downtrend line it is lending
resistance to price.
Using uptrend lines for support and downtrend line for resistance is like Re-using them again and
again for same function.
As it is bound to happen prices will breach these trendline one day or the other. When that
happens people generally discard these trendlines. I suggest we should apply the concept of reuse
in a new-life form for trendlines. The same trendlines which acted as supports may now act as
resistance and vice-versa. Thus the same trendline can be Re-used for a different function.
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This concept applies equally on stocks that are trading in horizontal ranges as well. In technical
analysis terms this concept is known as Change of Polarity Principle.
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Supports or Resistance lines drawn on stocks that are trading in a range are nothing but horizontal
trendlines. So, the same concept applies in both the cases. Previous supports can become
resistance and previous resistance can also become support.
Now I will show you how this concept can be applied in markets.
Cipla Ltd.
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Cipla Ltd. topped out just below 370 in December 2009, it revisited this level in December 2010 but
couldnt cross it. It fell short once again in February 2012. By September 2012 it closed at a new
high but consolidated for a couple of months before making a meaningful move upwards.
After topping out in January 2013 at 435 it headed southwards, this fall halted around previous
resistance level of 370. This happened for four times in succession. The stock rebounded from same
level in June 2013, December 2013, February 2014 and May 2014 before breaking out above the
previous high of 450.
ACC Ltd.
ACC Ltd. hit a high of around 1,120 in November 2010. This level acted as resistance in April 2011.
It broke out above this resistance and touched a high of 1,230 in October 2011. The correction from
this top found support at 1,120 from November 2011 to January 2012. Subsequent corrections in
June 2012 and April 2013 also found support at 1,120. Also notice the trendline drawn at 950 levels
which acted as support from October 2010 to July 2011. The same trendline lent support later in
August 2013 and January 2014.
The stock hit a life time high of 1,545 in October 2012. The stock reversed direction from similar
levels a couple of times in September 2014.
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Lupin Ltd.
Lupin Ltd. is on a tear for quite a long time. I began by drawing a resistance line from February 2011
peak. This line acted as resistance until May 2013 when the stock closed above this line. Later on
the same trendline lent support during an uptrend. The stock found support at this trendline and
rebounded after witnessing corrections in August 2013, January 2014 & May 2014. I have drawn a
parallel lines above this trendline. The topmost line is from December 2010 high. And the lower one
is from January 2010 low.
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Section - 4
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1. McDowell Ltd.
Trading In A Range
Recommended
hereHere
Recommended
McDowell had spent most of the last one year in a range of Rs 2,300-2,800. It was placed near the
lower end of this range. Based on my analysis I knew that there was very high probability that the
lower end of this range will act as a strong support in the immediate term.
So it did make a lot of sense to go ahead and make a buy recommendation which is exactly what I
did. I recommend a Buy at CMP of 2295 with a stoploss of Rs 2250 and target of Rs 2500-2550.
This target was achieved on the 20th of October 2014. The stock delivered a return of 11.1% in 100
days.
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2. Zee Learn
Previous Resistance becomes Support
Target Achieved
Here
Recommended
Here
The next stock that came on my radar was Zee Learn. It had broken out of a multi-year resistance
zone of 30-32 in June 2014. It moved to a high of 38.65 but was faltering back to the retest the
resistance zone of 30-32.
The chances of the earlier resistance zone now acting as supports were pretty high. So I decided
that buying this stock on a dip would make a lot of sense. Hence I initiated a buy on it at a level of
30 or lower. I kept my stoploss very close at 28 and recommended a buy for a target of 40 which
was slightly above the recent high that it had formed.
It presented the readers with a buying opportunity in a few days as the stock dipped to 30 and even
below that but didnt go beyond 29.20 levels. This stock achieved its target of Rs 40 within 38 days
of me making my recommendation. It delivered returns of 33% in 38 days flat.
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3. Elgi Equipment
Channeled Upmove
Target Achieved
Here
Recommended
Here
ELGI Equipments was yet another super-duper hit delivering 28% returns in 130 days. Now this is
where it gets interesting, I had combined the two techniques that I have spoken to you so far in the
guide. One is channels and the other one is breaking above the previous highs.
The stock had closed above its November 2010 high of 106 a few weeks back. But before that, it
took a lot of effort from March 2014 to May 2014 to cross this level of 106. Immediately after it
closed above 106 level, it entered into a consolidation range of 108 to 120.
It caught my attention just when it moved out of this consolidation range. I recommended a buy at
125 with a stoploss of 105 and gave a target of 160. This target was achieved on 19th November
2014.
Now let me remind you that though these were the main tools that I employed to pick these 3
stocks I also checked other technical parameters as well before I was convinced of picking these
stocks. What are these other technical parameters? Dont worry I will tell you everything I know,
including this, via our regular newsletter (which you are already signed up for), Profit Hunter.
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CONCLUSION
I am sure that now even you have the knowledge like professionals do of using these technical tools
to ensure you also can find trades with a potential of delivering 6% to 20% returns quickly on a
consistent basis.
I have covered quite a few tools and techniques that professionals use in their investment analysis.
But dont mistake thinking that these are the only tools available for analyzing markets. I would say
this is only the tip of the iceberg. There are many other important and interesting tools and
techniques that are there in my toolkit. And I would like to share all of them with you regularly.
Dont worry! You wont miss out on any of those. You have already signed up for the Daily Profit
Hunter newsletter, where I and my colleague Asad Dossani will write to you all about short term
investing opportunity every week. And the best part of it is that these will be directly be mailed to
you straight into your Inbox. So you can read them as per your convenience.
Thats all for now from my end.
Thank You. Happy Trading!
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