Of 2,320 stocks and exchange-traded funds in this week's analytical universe, 25 that are traded on the major American stock exchanges broke beyond their 20-day price channels, 19 to the upside and six to the downside.
In addition, four that are traded over the counter broke out, one to the upside and three to the downside.
Within my analytical universe, 1.3% of symbols gave bull or bear signals, down from 4.2% the prior trading day.
The ratio of bull to bear signals is 2:1, compared to 1:13 the prior trading day, the first bullish bias seen since June 7, when the ratio was 3:1.
Four of the major-exchange symbols survived my initial screening, all having broken out to the upside: BLC, GCI, JCOM and MDP.
None of the over-the-counter symbols survived my initial screening.
I'll do further analysis on the survivors that confirm their signals by trading beyond their breakout levels on Friday, June 14. GCI and BLC will be disqualified in the second wave of analysis because their bull signals came from sharp moves following the announcement that the former will be taking over the latter.
The symbols I'm analyzing are mid- and large-cap stocks having analyst coverage, as well as selected exchange-traded funds. I screened them for...
- the odds of a successful trades in the direction of the breakout since the present uptrend began on the S&P 500 weekly chart, on Oct. 4, 2011,
- a yield adjusted by those odds of 5% or greater,
- and absence of an earnings announcement within the next 30 days.
My cut-off point for bullish bias is a ratio of bull to bear signals of 2:1 or greater, and for bearish bias, 1:2 or smaller, rounded to the nearest whole number.
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