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Stocks Listed in Alphabetical Order Below |
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WillyWizard.com's |
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NASDAQ & NYSE |
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ROLLING STOCKS |
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Index List
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VISIT THIS PAGE DAILY
AND TRACK YOUR FAVORITES |
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If you want to watch
oversold and overbought conditions develop with your favorite NASDAQ
and NYSE Stocks this is the place to visit. |
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| If you have a company
stock that fits this category please email it for consideration
EMAIL |
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| Carefully chosen stocks
help the small investor manage a portfolio of high-return Rolling
Stocks. Some stocks will roll back and forth within a channel.
Channeling Rolling Stocks have a very clear and identifiable
historical pattern channeling up and down in repeated rolls
between a high and a low price. Once a stock like this is identified
it should be easy to buy low and to sell high. Two types of channeling
rolling stocks are desired. The first is a roller locked in an upward
channeling trend. The second is a sideways channeling roller locked
between high and low points. Once you begin to trade a Rolling Stock
you can make a potential profit of 10%-30% EVERY TIME THE
STOCK ROLLS within the channel. Just imagine playing the
rolls, diversifying between 'predictable' stocks. This tends to reduce
risk, while increasing profit potential. What would you give to wildly
swing those odds in your favor? Within this section of WillyWizard.com
I will attempt to identify Rolling Stocks that I have followed for
many months. |
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| When entering into a
Rolling Stock position you should not try to pick a bottom. The ideal
situation is buying after the bottom has been reached and the stock
has turned upward in the roll. Likewise when you sell a Rolling Stock
trying to guess a top is not a way to trade a roller. Using a
"trailing stop loss" strategy as your roller moves up is recommended.
As the stock price increases, this is a means of protecting your
profits, call it a "profit protector". Once a predetermined exit point
is reach selling 1/2 to 100% of your position is recommended. Trading
on buying entry points and selling exit points creates profits every
time you trade the roll. Unfortunately from time to time stocks report
bad news which change fundamentals. I will add and delete stocks as
fundamentals change. Fundamentals do change daily, monthly and
quarterly. The Enron (ENE) debacle of 2002 crashing from $80 to under
$1 is a good example of fundamental change. Therefore I recommend a
"stop loss" set in place at entry into a Rolling Stock position.
Everyone has their own tolerance for losses. The normal percentage
for a stop loss setting is 10% to 15% of the entry price. This is a
good practice to get in to from the beginning when trading Rolling
Stocks. You never know when an Enron might appear so always be on the
alert and use a "stop loss". |
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| This site will use charts
from Clear Station and Yahoo among others. All the tools you need to
follow and do analysis of individual stocks are provided in the index
column. |
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| The below charts are
ClearStation charts. I will decide on a chart site for long term use
as I develop this site. These stocks I have followed for many months.
Some have rolled sideways and some locked in an upward trend.
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| I am using a 13 day
exponential moving average (EMA), 50 day exponential moving
average. Moving averages are useful in that they act as floors when
prices are rising. (ClearStation) uses 13-day and 50-day exponential
moving averages (EMA). These are fairly standard values. The 13-day
EMA is drawn in light green, and the 50-day EMA is drawn in pink.
If a price bar of (stock) breaks through the 13-day EMA
convincingly, this would suggest that continuation of the uptrend is
somewhat in doubt. In many instances a Rolling Stock will break the 13
day EMA and testing the 50 day EMA.. The ideal roll is a testing of
the 50 EMA then a reversal move up from the 50 EMA moving through the
13 EMA. |
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| I will also use
Stochastic oscillator. An oscillator compares the current price of
a stock to its trading range in the recent past. It tells us if the
current price is unsustainable and about to turn around and head in
the other direction. |
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| Stochastic helps identify
turning points as prices swing back and forth. Stochastic can be used
to time trades effectively. You don't want to trade opposite the
direction of the broader trend! If the stochastic oscillator
indicates an overbought condition a position should be sold. Opposite
if stochastic oscillator indicates an oversold condition the position
should be reentered as the stocks begins its upward roll. |
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WillyWizard Rolling
Stocks |
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CHARTS ARE UPDATED DAILY |
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| The 13-day EMA is drawn
in light green, and the 50-day EMA is drawn in pink. |
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| ALL STOCK CHARTS
SHOULD BE STUDIED IN CONJUNCTION WITH INDEX CHARTS |
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| Dow Jones
30 Industrials (INDE: _INDU) |
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| Nasdaq
Composite Index (INDE: _COMPX) |
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| Standard &
Poors 500 Stocks (INDE: _INX) |
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| Nasdaq 100
Tr Sr I (AMEX: QQQ) |
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Companies are listed by symbol in letter order so you can find them
easy. |
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