Wall Street Insider Swears Money Pulling Method is Not Illegal

Ready to learn how to ethically steal TONS of money from other stock market traders with this one indicator?

Steve Cohen, a master trader, is known to use this indicator for his billion dollar hedge fund company. Mr. Cohen’s trading profits average over 50% a year!

He has some 60 traders working for him. He is a master of watching a stock’s volume.

More amateur traders overlook volume than any other technical indicator.

We all have holes in our learning. You need to read this article and make sure you plug the holes you might have in your learning of how to effectively use the volume indicator.

The meeting of minds between bulls and bears are represented in each measured unit of volume. The volume is a still picture of the psychology of the crowd trading a particular stock or market. Rising volume confirms the trend while falling volume questions the trend and whether the dominant group can keep it going.

In a sell off, increasing volume into the move tells you that panic has firmly settled in as traders scramble for the exit. If you look carefully, you’ll also see newbies jumping in as they bet the market is going to reverse. Keep in mind that in order for a sell order to execute, someone has to be a buyer. Every trade has these two sides. Jumping in to buy in a downtrend is known as trying to catch a falling knife. Most often it is a bad idea. Never bet against the wisdom of the crowd. Let some other newbie put on that trade. When all the sellers have exited the stock, the volume on the downside falls off as the downward move begins to run out of steam.

In an uptrend, rising volume shows that greed is setting in as people dog pile into the stock. It also shows sellers dumping their position betting that the market is going to turn around. Remember, in order for a buy order to execute, there has to be a seller somewhere. Selling into an uptrend makes sense only if your original profit thesis (target) has been met. When all the buyers are done chasing the stock higher, the volume on the upside falls as the uptrend runs out of steam.

But volume tells more than just the conviction of the current trend. Volume gives traders several useful clues.

If the volume spikes on a single day, it often means that a new trend is about to start, especially if it happens on a breakout from a previous trading range. If the volume spikes 300 percent or more above the average it often means that market hysteria has set in. This occurs when fearful bears decide that a downward move has broken key support and rush in to sell short or when bulls decide that an uptrend is for real on a resistance break and rush in to buy.

When price and volume diverge the stock is usually at a turning point.

If price rises while volume falls, it is a signal that the uptrend is not attracting very much interest. If price falls to a new low and volume falls at the same time, it is a signal that the downtrend is not attracting very much interest and an upside reversal is likely. Price is more important than volume but a master traders knows how to analyze volume in order to gauge the psychology of market participants.

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