lol Lou. Thats the typo of all typos, eh?
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lol Lou. Thats the typo of all typos, eh?
If you wish to reduce the whipsawing of having entry and exit based on a single MA then you modify you entry criteria to when the price rises a few percent above the MA and you sell when the price drops a few percent below the MA.
Still a simple system but with two independent variables to play with giving you hours of fun.
However you go about determining a useful system getting your exits conditions right and sticking to them is more important than getting your entries right.
best wishes
Paper Tiger
I have shares in AGL that have done OK in a little over 10 months.
It was a punt based on a morningstar recommendation.
A transition to green energy and an activist shareholder has me thinking this is no longer the dividend payer I was after and not very comfortable with it.
Morningstar still has a $13.30 valuation but now only an "accumulate" recommendation. (seems odd as the recommendation price is currently 51% above todays price. That sounds more like a buy to me if you believe in your valuation)
My question is I am happy to let my profits run but on a purely technical basis what would you look for in price movements to sell at the simplest level. E.g. crossing the 90day moving average or would you use a longer time period.
Indicators on the ASB securities website are volume, RSI and Stochastic fast and slow I assume a lot of the price movement has been the billionaire buying his stake in the company.
Torn as I don’t want to sell in case Morningstar is right and I have another 51% upside in capital appreciation but not comfortable with the company. I was thinking maybe TA can stop me selling out too soon.
The slow Stochastic squiggle is above 80 I guess sell if it drops below that.
Any thoughts appreciated.