How Can You Tell Volume is Increasing During the Day?
Some days it is easy to tell, you check the volume and it is higher than
average or the previous day's volume.
Often, however, a stock is making
the move you want it to make after the first hour and volume is somewhere
below where you want it. How do you tell if you should enter the trade?
First, you have to know what volume you are looking for and be able to
find intra-day volumes.
Your broker is a good source.
Real time services
show you exact volumes.
Quote.com also gives you intra-day volume and
average volumes, though it is delayed at least twenty minutes.
After you can get intra-day volumes, how do you know if you are on target?
As with most cases, there is no 100% foolproof method that is exact every
time.
As a general rule, stocks have a surge of volume in the first hour
and in the last hour.
If it is a calm day, volume will usually slow
during the middle hours, especially at lunch.
You will frequently see the
morning volume surge followed by a drop off.
If a stock is going to move
for the day, however, you usually see volume again swing up after that
initial drop.
After that first volume surge, you can check and see where the volume
stands with respect to tour volume targets for the day.
If you see the
stock is 40% or better of the target volume, you can very comfortable that
it will make your target.
If the stock is moving well and you have hit that
volume, you can feel good about entering a trade.
You may be wrong, but
the odds are with you.
Going into the last two hours, if you see the stock
start to move, you should check the volume.
If the volume is within 20%-30% of
the target range, it may hit the target.
With
the stock moving as you want it to and volume looking good, you can again
feel good about entering the trade.
As you can see, there are no hard and fast rules. If the stock is showing good momentum and the volume is supporting that move by showing equal life, we feel good about the trade.
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Larry Potter