New Members: Be sure to confirm your email address by clicking on the link that was sent to your email inbox. You will not be able to post messages until you click that link.
Outperforming S&P500
Comments
-
As far as I know, you can't do it directly - that is by incorporating the $SPX symbol into your scan.
However, you could determine the ROC(x) for $SPX from a chart of the symbol that includes the ROC indicator, then build a scan with the condition ROC(x) greater than whatever is the current indicator reading on the chart.
For instance, on 6/30, the closing ROC(63) for $SPX was 4.69.
So your scan would include the line
and [ROC(63) > 4.69]
Tomorrow, 4.69 will be something slightly different. You can choose whatever time period you like for ROC. 63 days is a quarter, 20 or 21 days is a month, etc.
You can also enhance the scan by adding the "rank by" clause
rank by ROC(63)
(Note the syntax for "rank by" does NOT require "and" or square brackets)
The rank by clause will order the results by largest rate of change (best out performance) and you can check "preserve order" when you save the results to a list to display the strongest stocks in order0 -
Thank you so much, I will do that and play with the results.0
-
Good Answer markd!
I would like to add that the tool used to determine out-performing/under-performing is the Price Relative. Price Relative cannot be used in the scan engine. I think a couple of the reasons for this include: 1.) what markd said above is that you cannot directly use a symbol as parameter input in a scan function. 2.) end values are not important in Price Relative - only the slope. (If it was possible, personally, I think it would be cool to scan for Price Relative crossing a moving average.)
To answer your question in a different manner: Recently what I am starting to learn is the following: Take a top-down approach. Start with the macro InterMarket view of all the asset classes and where the market is at in terms of the business cycle. This will help you determine where the money is going. This takes a lot of knowledge, skill, and infrastructure (ChartLists). Then you can focus your scans.0 -
Just put the 500 SP 500 components in a list...Sort by performance week, month, 3 mos etc...Then see what the $SPX was over the same time frame0
-
Thanks, Kevo. You are correct that ROC is not the same as Price Relative. However, it yields pretty good results in that the highest ranking charts do in fact have nicely up sloping Price Relative lines. You could refine this scan a little more by adding a ROC test for shorter periods - e.g. 21 days vs. the $SPX ROC for 21 days. Some of the ROC 63 only results have seen their day, but adding the ROC 21 yields more current candidates.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 2.3K StockCharts
- 395 SharpCharts
- 146 Other Charting Tools
- 69 Saved Charts and ChartLists
- 1.5K Scanning
- 73 Data Issues
- 177 Other StockCharts Questions
- 218 Technical Analysis
- 155 Using Technical Analysis
- 2 InterMarket and International
- 19 Market and Breadth Indicators
- 42 Market Analysis
- 109 Trading
- 109 Trading Strategies
- 163 S.C.A.N the StockCharts Answer Network forum
- 65 Using this StockCharts Answer Network forum
- 98 s.c.a.n. archives
- 5 Off-Topic
- 6 The Cogitation & Rumination Emporium
- Forum Test Area