User:Bobsagles/sandbox

it took losing money to learn it.

investing:

if the price goes higher than the previous high during a phase of increased activity, buy, unless (because of not as frequent activity) you want to wait to buy at the next low, as long as the next low is remarkably (more than noticeably[?]) higher than the previous low, to buy with the buyers who also buy (to consider buying right when the price goes higher than the previous high as an alternative to just buying at the low [with the hopes that the buying activity will increase.])(buy at the low if activity isn't increasing [while not stagnant] to make money from the subsequently deescalating highs.) sell when they start selling too much which consequently affects the amount and frequency that they'd buy.

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 * also, does the trends equal persistence to keep the prices higher (or is it persisting to keep the hope unfulfillingly[?])?

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 * if they've got the most sway (and the value should go up,) follow their lead. watch and wait.

↑if they aren't confident about the price going higher and they're not selling below a lower price though buying consecutively less, they probably have to sell before they are confident about a price to start a buying trend from.

↑if anything, it's something you can pick up on from there.

google "most active stocks." at least the 50¢-$1 range, though, as the less than a penny range is usually kicking the bucket.

when to buy: when they're undecided about making the price go lower

when to sell: when they're uninspired about making the price go higher and when they're undecided about the price going higher for too long

when to not buy: when they're undecided about the price going either way because of it stagnating higher than a low after a massive amount of selling (maybe compare with the opening price if there was a massive amount of buying sometime before a massive amount of selling)

when to not sell: when they're undecided about or just not supporting making the price go down at and according to reasonable price elevations (which is based on more frequent amounts of activity to have an easier time noticing the odds)