Profiting From TradingMarkets: How To Use The Stock Scanner–Part 1

Editor’s Note:

Each week we feature a lesson that helps you profit from TradingMarkets. This
week we are presenting Part I of a four-part series from Dave Landry which shows
you how to use the TradingMarkets Stock Scanner. 
E-mail me if you have
any questions.

Brice

Scanning for Profits, Part I: Using Relative Strength

By David Landry

TradingMarkets.com


Your quest for trading profits begins
with finding the right stocks to trade. Stocks with a high EPS are a good place
to start because earnings, in part, power stock prices. The proof, though, is in
the pudding. What stocks are moving right now? To answer that question, you need
to look closely at Relative Strength.

Simply stated,
Relative Strength (RS) is a measure of a stock’s price performance compared to
either a market index, such as the S&P 500, or against a universe of stocks. RS
quickly tells you whether a stock is outperforming or under performing the
overall market.

Displayed as a number
from 1-99, a high RS indicates a strong stock; a low RS, a weak stock. A
Relative Strength rating of 99 means that a stock outperformed 99% of its peers.
By contrast, a Relative Strength of 1 means that the stock performed worse than
99% of the others. A stock with a high RS is usually uptrending (not always,
since a stock going sideways will have a high RS if the overall market is going
down). Stocks with low RS are downtrending, performing worse than most other
stocks. A stock that is down 10% during a period when the market is up 10% is
showing poor relative strength.

The

Tradingmarkets.com Stock Scanner
contains a database of about 5000 stocks.
When you perform a scan using this system, you’re measuring a stock against this
database.
Ideally, you want to focus on
indices, sectors and stocks that are performing the best, i.e. the ones that
have high relative strength.

To give you an idea of what RS
looks like, several chart examples will help. Figure 1 (below) is a chart of the
S&P 500 Index as of 3/7/01.The index is obviously in a downtrend, trading below
the 50- and 200-day moving averages. This is the index used by many as a measure
of the overall market.

Figure 1

Compare this with Figure 2, a
chart of the Oil Services Index (OSX), also as of 3/7/01. This index, despite a
downtrend beginning early December, is trading in two-month-high territory.
Obviously, the OSX is stronger relative to the S&P 500. To say merely,
“The market was down” completely misses the boat, There are always sectors and
stocks moving, no matter what the overall market is doing.

Figure 2

Figure 3 (below) is a chart of
Rowan Companies, Inc. (RDC) for the same period. Rowan is a member of the Oil
Service Sector Index. The six-month RS is 83, which means RDC was stronger than
83% of all other stocks in the Tradingmarkets.com Stock Scanner database for
that period. Despite a weak first three months, the price at the end of
the six-month period was very close to the price at the beginning of the period,
which is why the RS was so high — the rest of the market was getting
slammed. RDC held up well in a down market, and therefore, had good relative
strength. In the most recent three-month period, the stock moved up nicely, and
the 93 RS reflects this strong move. The stock had better performance for the
three-month period than it had for the six-month period.

Figure 3

During the three-month period,
RDC showed higher highs and higher lows and good thrusting days followed by
tradeable pullbacks — what a strong stock should have.

Now let’s take a look at a weak
stock during the same period.

Figure 4 is a
chart of Cisco, with a three- and six-month RS of 3. If you like to play the
long side, there’s not much here for you. Aside from a few rallies, the obvious
trend here is down. Any rally that materialized got crushed quickly. If you
found a setup that looked good, it was probably doomed from the beginning.

Figure 4

The fact is, bullish patterns
found in stocks with low RS tend not to work out as well (if at all) as those
found in higher RS stocks. No matter what the pattern looks like, or where the
support lies, or what your indicators say, or what (God forbid) the stars say,
it’s probably not going to work well in a stock with poor RS.

The moral? Focus on stocks with
strong RS.

The best is 99, but use at
least 85 in your scans. This way you’ll only be looking at stocks that have a
good shot at reacting well to pattern setups.

The three-month relative strength is the
more significant and timely number, since it deals with the most recent price
performance.

“I like to short,”
you say. Fine, then focus on stocks with low RS. Be careful of stocks whose RS
is too low — some of these have already completed most of their downward
move. For shorting, RS of 20-50 is a good place to start.

One more thing:
As market conditions improve, high-RS
stocks are more likely to bust out of the gates quicker. Watch them.