@IBD_KShreve Hi Ken,
As an IBD subscriber I watch the IBD videos daily. Recently I find the the Text accompanying the chart and other visuals are swarmped by Text in Huge size font making it impossible to view the charts. Can you please rectify this without covering charts?
If we look at the weekly chart of $NVDA, it is what late William O'Neil would have called a special case for an agressive entry with an upside reversal at its recent bottom of a top stock in a raging bull market.
IBD recommended exposure level is 80-100% now. But I don't find any stock a screaming buy now. I am down to Bitcoin hodling only. How can I reconcile this difference? The exposure level makes sense If winners like CLS, PLTR, AXON, VRT, RCL with big cushions are held.
Want to display 2 charts of $xyz on two screens using MarketSurge: Say you have a weekly chart on one screen, then click the "chart" icon on the top right & move the new chart to the other screen. You can have a monthly on or an unanoted weekly on the 2nd. >>>
My watchlists on MarketSurge includes one titled: Missed & Messed Stocks, during the recent past. This list helps me to keep learning from these top stocks, the faulty decisions or actions that deprived me from holding them: eg. $DUOL which I passed it on 1st stage Breakout.
I am reading Annie Duke's book "Thinking in Bets" mentioned in an eIBD article over agin. I find it so valuable to investors and traders. She explains how the cognitive biases nature has hard-wired us affect our trading habits adversely. Explains how we can improve descisions
FED could have used the new high in inflation rate in 2021 to start ramping up rates, and start cutting rates at the new low in inflation in 2024. This time it is not too late in my humble opinion. Chart from https://t.co/GD1NB5h1NQ
$INTA formed an IBD style "ants" pattern on the right side of a 1st stage cup base, broke out on mediocre volume, pulled back and now powering up. Took a position when it moved above buy point 45.43 on 9/16/24.
“You take calculated risk in a
state of having perfect information,”
he said. “But in chess, risk is
intuited because you have to decide
your next move with limited information.
Intuiting risk demands a
subtle mind and a very cool head.” Maurice Asley
It is true in stock trading.