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January 29, 2010
The Money Making Power of Float Charts...
This Week's Example...Rentek Inc. (RTK) Here's the Entire View on a Daily Chart
Here's the View at the Breakout Day
Follow Through Day
At the Top of the Run
1. Accumulation of the floating supply of shares by Smart Money individuals. The floating supply are the shares actually available for trading. When a company comes public, they issue shares outstanding. The company's insiders hold some percentage and sell the rest to the public. The shares sold to the public are are actually available for trading are called the floating supply of shares or simply the float. The gray float box on float charts show the distance on the chart that it takes for the cumulative volume to equal the number of shares in the float. Think of it as the area where new ownership buys a majority holding of the shares available to be traded. 2. Breakout - Once the float is tightly held, any new demand leads to a rise in prices which causes the price to breakout above the float box (see charts below). The breakout is the first indication that prices may be heading higher. The top of the float box is also a strong line of resistance. This means that prices might head lower from this point. 3. Follow Through - To confirm that prices are indeed moving higher the stocks must have a follow through day. Follow through days occur when the price moves strongly higher on above average float box volume (150% or greater). Average Float Box Volume is the average volume within the distance of the float box. The red Average Float Box Volume line tracks it.
When these three things occur, particularly at
the beginning of a new broad market
rally,
Silver
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