The Complete Stock Resources Site For The Intelligent Investor

 

 
Adam & Eve Tops
Anticipating  A Selloff
Andrews Pitch Fork
Bid-Ask
Bilateral Trade Setups
Bollinger Bands
Bottoms
Breakouts
Breakout Trading
Canslim
ClearAir
Comp. Relative Strength
Cup With Handle
Cutting Loses
Daily Range
Declines
Exit Strategies
Exploring Market Physics
Dow and Elliot Waves
False Breakouts and Whipsaws
Flags and Pennants
5 Fibonacci Tricks
Finding Stocks
Fun With Fibonacci
Gaps
Greed and Fear
Highs
Low Down On Bottoms
Market Timing
Head and Shoulders
Hell's Triangle
Momentum Cycles
Momentum Trading
Morning Gap Strategies
Moving Average Crossovers
Overbought/Oversold
Pattern Failure
Pitfalls Of Selling Short
Playing Failed Patterns
Point and Figure
Pull Back Day Trading
Risk/Reward
Reversals
Selling Declines
Stochastics
Scanning Tips
Stage Analysis
Surviving Bear Markets
The Big W
Tale Of The Tape
Tape Reading
Time Trading
The Gap Primer
Tops
Trailing Stops
Trading Execution Zone
Triangle Trading
Trend Waves
Trend Direction and Timing
Trends
The Profitable Trader
Uncharted Territory
Williams %R
Wedges and Volume
20 Golden Rules
20 Rules For Trade Execution
20 Rules To Stop Losing Money
5 Wave Decline
3-D Trade Execution
Voodoo Trading

 HOME CANDLESTICKS GECKO'S PICKS WATCH LIST ARTICLES FOREX JOIN US LINKS

Stock Target Price

One of the hardest things for investors is to determine a stock target price.  Once a stock does breakout from a favorable chart pattern the question is how high will it go?   That is usually a very hard question to answer.

There are a few things as an investor that you can look at to determine a stock target price.  These include previous resistance zones, longer term moving averages and Fibonancci Retracement Levels.

Let's look at an example.   Amazon (AMZN) completed a longer term Cup over a 2 year period and then developed a 4 week Handle (H).   In this case my projected longer term stock target price for AMZN would have been in the upper 40's which coincided with its longer term 38.2% Retracement Level calculated from the early 2000 high to the Summer 2001 low.  Notice that AMZN broke out of its 4 week Handle in April of 2003 and than rallied up to its 38.2% Retracement Level (point A) where it began to encounter some resistance. 

At this point as an investor the question becomes do you lock in profits or do you hold for a longer term gain?  One strategy you could have used was to sell half of your initial position near the 38.2% Retracement Level and then continue to hold onto the other half and raise your trailing Stop to just above the original Pivot Point which was around $28.  That way if AMZN had sold off down the road you still would have broke even or had a small gain in the other half of your position.  

Meanwhile as AMZN traded sideways near its longer term $38.2% Retracement Level it formed another "Cup and Handle" pattern.  In this case the next potential target price for AMZN would have been at its 50% Retracement Level near $60.  Once AMZN broke out in late September it quickly rose up to its 50% Retracement level before stalling out again (point B).  At this point if you had invested in AMZN when it originally broke out in the upper $20's you could have sold the remaining half of your position for a nice profit.  If you had missed the first breakout in the upper $20's and took a new position after AMZN broke out of its second "Cup and Handle" pattern then you could have sold half your position near $60 and then placed a trailing Stop just above the Pivot Point which was near $48.  In the future if AMZN can break above its 50% Retracement Level then there is probably a good chance it will rise up to its longer term 61.8% Retracement Level near $72 (point C).  This is where I would sell the rest of my position if AMZN did rise up to the lower $70's down the road.

  

Knowing where specific longer term Retracement Levels reside can give investors insight into a stocks potential target price after it breaks out of a favorable chart pattern such as the "Cup and Handle".