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At 12:43 PM 04/13/2000 +0200, you wrote:
>>>>
Herman :
Very interesting : were did you get this information from ?
is this information reliable ? (statistically).
and what about stocks who go from f.e. $50 to $300 ?
If you can find the cycle go with it (up:long,down:short).
QCOM,RMBS
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I was only interested in rough figures, so I just read two prices from the
12 month chart for each group. I know there were a few index funds in the
lot but I don't think they distorted the general trend significantly. I
used closing prices on the day of my analysis for grouping, the price of
one year ago was only used to calculate the year's gain. Within the year
price fluctuations outside the start-ending prices were ignored.
Using VectorVest ( http://www.vectorvest.com/ ) it is quite easy to perform
analysis that include fundamental data, something that is missing in MS. VV
has some 30 columns of fundamental data that can be screened in seconds for
approx. 7000+ US/CAN stocks. Quite efficient actually.
If you are interested I can email you the full 29 column worksheet
privately if you like. I am sure some tinkering would reveal other price
related trends.
Better: VV has a 5 weeks trial subscription (software and EOD daily data)
for $29 - lots of fun to play with. You asked for the source of my data - I
have no stakes in it :-)
Happy trading,
Herman.
>>>>
Will try to use it somehow.
Thx
Theo Lockefeer.
----- Original Message -----
From: Herman van den Bergen <<mailto:psytek@xxxxxxxx>psytek@xxxxxxxx>
To: <<mailto:metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: April 13, 2000 2:51 AM
Subject: Performance vs Price
> Hi,
>
> I am a newbie and invite your comments on the idea that buying stocks in
> certain price ranges might give one a little extra edge. See Excell chart
> attached.
>
> Has anybody used this relationship to their advantage?
>
> Happy trading,
> Herman.
>
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