Look For Follow-Through Day To Start Uptrend
BY DONALD H. GOLD
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY
Posted 1/18/2008
Understanding The Market Cycle
By now, regular readers of Investor's Corner know how important the market cycle is to investment strategy.
Today's column kicks off a special series that will examine each stage in the cycle, from the bottoming signals, to the art of stock picking, to sell signals, all the way to spotting a market top.
Today we'll look at the follow-through, which marks the end of a correction or bear market. It's the birth of a new confirmed uptrend.
A follow-through consists of a powerful rise in one of the major market indexes — the Dow, Nasdaq, New York composite or S&P 500. The index gain must be well above 1%. Volume must be heavier than that of the prior session.
Why is it so crucial to wait for this message from the market? If you jump back into a falling market too early, you'll be caught in a trap.
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Seventy percent to 80% of follow-throughs work. More impressively, there has never been a successful uptrend without one.
Timing is everything.
A follow-through is only valid in Day 4 or later of a rally attempt. You may see a big jump in the indexes the first, second or third day of a rally attempt. But historically, such early moves — perhaps fueled by short covering — aren't reliable bottoming signals.
How do you count the days of a rally?
After the market makes a low for the correction, look for any positive close in any of the main indexes. That gain marks Day 1 of the rally attempt.
That higher close can take place on the same day as the low, or it may come in a later session.
The index remains in a rally try unless it sinks to fresh lows.
Follow-throughs tend to happen within the first couple of weeks of a rally try. But if the signal comes, say on Day 22, so be it.
There have been cases in market history when follow-throughs confirmed new uptrends weeks after the market's lows.
And don't be put off by bad news headlines like economic problems, unrest in Pakistan or the latest celebrity split.
First, almost all headlines proclaim bad news. That's what news generally is. Second, if you wait for peace on Earth and an economic recovery, leading stocks will be well extended from proper buy points.
The market always looks ahead, and it may see a brighter outlook long before the news catches up.
The follow-through day is confirmation that big institutional investors are back in the market as aggressive buyers.
By this time, the market has already sold off, as the big guns scramble to unload shares. Then, at some point, they had likely moved to a stand-aside posture.
But eventually, institutions commit to buying again.
The follow-through is that day when the mutual funds, hedge funds and other major investors are back in full force. The race is on.
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