Several countertrend targets were discussed on Nov. 1 in the original post, the relevant excerpts of which are copied below:
"For now, price is well contained within that channel. Shorting does not make sense until good confirmation arises that this bear rally is finished. The VWAP anchored to YTD lows (orange) also may work as a guide for the short-term bear rally. It is prudent not to fight the rally until it has weakened or has reached a major resistance level and shown signs of weakening momentum or negative divergences. . . .
What are some logical price targets for this rally? Before discussing targets, a bit of a disclaimer. Countertrend targets can be a little silly to discuss—a countertrend rally can fail at any time . . . .
NVDA closed at $135 today, November 1. SquishTrade thinks NVDA has a reasonable probability of reaching $140.55 (the blue line on the Primary Chart that coincides with a major swing low).
Only if $140.55 is exceeded, the next price target can come into play—which is $144.36, a key Fibonacci level. After that is the $145-150 gap fill area which will also coincide with the down TL from March 2022 (on a log chart) in the next week or so.
Just because these targets make sense does not mean that they should be traded, which depends on a person's risk tolerance, time frame, ability to use stops and manage risk as well as understanding of volatility."
Later in a Nov. 8 update, ST discussed another pT, the $154 resistance level that might be reached as well.
All these targets have been successfully reached. NVDA has climbed to nearly $169.98 yesterday.
The only aspect of the original post that remains unfulfilled is the implied forecast that the downtrend will resume. (This implication derives from ST's discussion of the move off YTD lows as a "bear rally" and identification of resistance levels and countertrend targets.)
ST will continue to monitor NVDA and AMD for a reversal to resume the downtrend. A key tell is that semiconductors decisively undercut prior YTD lows in June, which creates a bearish pattern generally speaking. To reiterate a point made above:
"Some may be feeling a bit giddy over the fact that NVDA has rallied 28% off the lows. But look at those other bear rallies since the all-time highs shown on the Primary Chart. How do we know this time will be different? Expecting it to be different before a dramatic shift in the macro environment, or before a serious change in trend structure, is like hoping a lottery ticket will somehow beat the astronomical odds against it. . . . "