Enter Stock Symbol:
The stock will be thoroughly analyzed using a combination of technical analysis and fundamental analysis.

All technical indicators such as Stochastic, MACD, CCI, RSI, Moving Averages are all lagging indicators. They are either derived directly or indirectly from the price or volume of a stock. However, if they formed a divergence with the price, they become leading indicators, allowing you to buy before major trend reversals. Let’s look at the divergence patterns.

Bullish Stochastic Divergence

There are two types of bullish divergence patterns.

Type 1
1. When a stock is in a downtrend, the price is going down and at the same time frame,
2. Stochastic is going up.

Type 2
1. When a stock is in a consolidation area and at the same time frame,
2. Stochastic is going up.

The psychology behind this pattern is simple. The price is dropping, but the trend becomes weaker and weaker with a bullish reversal up ahead. The Type 1 divergence is more bullish than Type 2.

Bearish Stochastic Divergence

There are two types of bearish divergence patterns.

Type 1
1. When a stock is in an uptrend, the price is going up and at the same time frame,
2. Stochastic is going down.

Type 2
1. When a stock is in consolidation area and at the same time frame,
2. Stochastic is going down.

The psychology behind this bearish divergence pattern is the same as the bullish one. The price is going higher, but the trend becomes weaker and weaker with a bearish reversal up ahead. The Type 1 divergence is more bearish than Type 2.


Let’s look at some real examples.

The figure below shows DTV formed a Stochastic divergence on Mar 9 when the stock was still in a downtrend. Soon after the divergence pattern, the trend reversed, and the stock price went from 19 all the way up to 25.5.

The figure below shows two divergence patterns for the same stock. The first one was formed back in mid April as highlighted in blue, and the stock price went from around 9.25 to 15.5. The second one was from last week and that was one of the reasons why I bought this stock. Let’s see how it turns out.

Divergence is a leading technical indicator and is one of the most important indicators in technical analysis. However, one thing to always keep in mind is, no single technical indicator works all the time. When a pattern doesn’t work out, you must sell the stock and look elsewhere. There are thousands of stocks out there, so don’t fall in love with any one stock. You don’t have to be right every time to make money in the stock market. The important thing for you is to make lots of money when you were right and get out of trades with minimum losses as quickly as possible when you were wrong. After all, that’s what technical analysis is all about.

If you like what you read, you may want to subscribe to my newsletters for free. Just fill out the form below, and you will receive stock picks and trading strategies from me in the future.
Name:
Email:

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

Other Popular Posts

How to build a trading system? When to sell your stocks?
Candlestick Patterns Top 10 Candlestick Patterns
Penny Stocks How to choose a stock broker?
How to trade gap ups? What are gap ups?
Trading Technical Analysis Best Stock Tips
Risky Penny Stocks How to Use MarketClub?
Stock Screener Beyond Technical Analysis
How to screen for stocks? MarketClub Winners
How to trade earnings report? Learn how to trade stocks
Bullish Engulfing Pattern Bearish Engulfing Pattern
How to search for stocks? Swing Trading Strategies
How to day trade? Best Stock Brokers
Trading System Technical Analysis vs. Fundamental Analysis
How to trade seasonal stocks? How to stay alert in the stock market?
Dow Components Greed and Fear
Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) Why are people losing money trading?
OptionsHouse Review Should you buy penny stocks?
Best Stock Screeners When to sell stocks?