Volume Analysis (Part I of IV) by Dennis Peterson

Volume tells  us how many shares are traded and thus gives us a measure
of buying and selling enthusiasm.

Security:   AOL
Position:   N/A

Suppose someone offered you something you wanted for less money than it
cost two weeks ago. Would you turn it down? What if  everyone in your
neighborhood had heard about this bargain and they all  wanted the same
thing? Would they turn it down too? Thinking about  stocks and how many
people are buying a bargain, or selling something  that is too
expensive, is one way to remember how to use volume.  Obviously if a
stock is perceived to be a bargain, then the whole  neighborhood will
jump in. If it's perceived to be too expensive, then  not many will buy
it.

You may have heard the phrase "volume  leads price." Does this mean, for
example, that if volume is increasing  price will also? Obviously, this
is not always the case. The phrase  should be "volume and price together
can tell you if the market is  comfortable with a price." The statement
"Volume leads price" leaves out so many details that it's more harmful
than helpful.

If the  majority of investors and traders think something is a bargain,
then  price and volume increase together. When price continues up and
volume  declines, it's a sign the market community as whole has lost its
enthusiasm (more on this later). It's a bad sign for those who are 
buying, that is, those who have taken long positions. The other side of 
the coin is that as prices are declining, then volume should decrease. 
Obviously if something is becoming a bargain then there are fewer 
sellers and volume decreases. If volume increases as prices fall then a 
degree of panic has set in. The market is overreacting.



When prices go up on increasing volume and down on  decreasing volume
the market is said to be in gear with price and  volume. It can also get
out of gear on a regular basis. Out of gear  normally means the market
has gone too far - it has overreacted. When  volume drops off below the
norm established during the last two to four  weeks, the market doesn't
know what it wants to do and price will  typically jump around
unpredictably. To see this in action, I'll take a  stock and first
identify the volume trends -- I don't expect to see a  whole bunch. Next
I'll go to the prices and identify price trends. For  the part of the
price trend not covered by a volume trend, I will then  have to see if
the trend continued because of selling panic or  overbuying exuberance
(more on this later).

  [http://stashbox.org/881179/421.gif]  Figure 1: AOL price and volume.
To perform volume  analysis, first identify volume trends and then go to
price and identify the price trends. Graphic provided by: MetaStock
<http://www.equis.com/> . Graphic provided by: Data vendor: eSignal<.
<http://esignal.com/>
Figure 1 is a daily volume and price chart of AOL that typifies  volume
and price behavior. The chronology of the chart is as follows:

1. AOL  begins a price downtrend with decreasing volume.
2. At $55 per share  panic selling hits and drives the price below a
rational price.
3. The price reacts back up, goes into a second downtrend with
decreasing  volume, and stops at $55.
4. An uptrend then starts initially on  growing volume, but the volume
goes up too much in too short of a time  frame to be sustainable and
then lessens as price carries on up to $75.
5. The  third downtrend is again one that has decreasing price with
decreasing  volume, and it also stops at $55!
6. During May and June no one is  sure what to do with AOL as indicated
by the low volume.
7. Now look at where I have started each of the downtrends. They all
start at $63 which happens to be the peak in July! To do this analysis I
first  looked for volume that was increasing or decreasing. I then went
up to  the price chart to draw the price trendlines, to see how price
was behaving.

During this time frame the market thought that $55 was a reasonable
price and $63 was too high a price. AOL only got higher  than $63 by
getting out of gear, and lower than $55 by either getting  out of gear
or bouncing around on low volume -- disinterest.





Dennis Peterson

Market index trading on a daily basis.
Title: Staff Writer Company: Technical Analysis,  Inc.
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