Bid queue system - Offer PPRO shares (Gain Shares) |
For traders, the Bid - Offer queuing system may only be useful for placing buy and sell orders, and see the stock price queue as a basis for making decisions to buy and sell in the desired price range. If you don't understand bid and offer, please read the post: Bid-Offer in the Stock Market - Part I. Also read: Bid-Offer in the Stock Market - Part II. Read also: Bid-Offer in the Stock Market - Part III. However, the actual Bid - Offer in the stock queue does more than that.
"So, what does it do?"
If you are a loyal visitor to my website, you must have come across my post entitled: Setting Stock Options Trading (Part I) and Traders Must Have Preferred Stocks (Part II). So, that's the purpose of this post, which is to determine the preferred stocks that you can trade consistently and to profit from the stocks that are right for you to trade. How to?
The trick is to observe the movement of the stock queue system during the Exchange trading hours. For beginners, or for traders who are in the process of determining preferred stocks to trade, it takes time to sacrifice to monitor stock price movements. Yes, like it or not, if you want to get good results, you have to make sacrifices.
Observing this queuing system is done by monitoring the movement of several stocks - 6 stocks. Observe the movement of the same stocks over a certain period of time. Pay attention to how fast the stock moves. The stock is moving at what price, and "match" the support and resistance lines with technical analysis of the stock.
Sometimes, preferred stocks can be found when you look at the bid-offer system. When you can determine the movement of stock prices to move in that price range to that price range, you can decide you have to buy at that price and sell back at that price. More precisely, when referring to technical analysis, the price boundaries are called the support line (lower limit) and resistance line (upper limit).
For those of you who already have selected stocks and are already proficient at trading, you don't need to keep watching this queue system. You can queue at that price and then you just stay and do other activities.
But remember, the stock queue system is NOT used as an analysis for stock trading decisions (buy or sell). Observing the queuing system is indeed useful to see price movements, namely to see what price range the stock is in. However, for buying or selling decisions, of course you have to wait for the right technical moment.
And one more thing, the bid-offer queue system that you need to observe is the movement of the stock price, not just the bid and offer queue. Why? Because if you only observe the bid and offer queuing system (looking at the number of requests and offers), the queuing system can be "deceptive".
"What do you mean Mr. Heze?"
When you look at the stock trading queuing system within a certain hour, then you see that at that time the demand for ICBP shares was more than the supply, it does not mean that the stock price will definitely rise at that time (although usually if the bid is more than the offer, the price will rise). ). The queuing system is subject to change. It could be that when the demand queue is bigger, suddenly a lot of people start selling, and the big queue of selling offers changes, eventually the price goes down.
So I suggest, you better observe the ups and downs of stock prices and not just look at the size of the demand and supply at that time.