15 MIN showing a Bull flag, Cup & Handle, and an Inverse H & STracking 3 bullish trends on GME 15 MIN. a Bull Flag, Cup & Handle, and an Inverted Head and Shoulders. Lets see how this plays out. If we use the FIB EXT as a gauge we could see a bounce to 17.80 on the 15..Longby impossiblebull10
ENTERING A SHORT FOR $GMEThe stock is still a meme stock and retail investors don't have the money to keep the stock hyped. when you look at options people who predicted the pump are out after making a killing on it. you look at charts and you can agree that the stock is in a downtrend and it is now facing a trendline resistance. No fundamental reason for the recent pump. NYSE:GME Shortby kithinjimicah221
YUUUUGE Bull Flag $GME!!!! NYSE:GME Whoa! Havent looked at this chart in a while. I just drew the downtrend support line and flag pole today. The downward resistance line has been there for months now without me changing or modifying. Seems to be now breaking out of that channel. My 1st target would be long 22.00Calls. Then after wait for confirmation or yolo target 27 OTM calls. Hit me up on snapchat DM for a free trade idea @Shonufftrades Longby lalo.daman6
GameStop's Stock Experienced a Sharp IncreaseKey Takeaway 1. Investors eagerly anticipate GameStop's Fiscal Q3 2024 earnings report scheduled for December 6th, following the recent stock movement. 2. Despite challenges, there's speculation that GameStop could report a profitable quarter, presenting a potential catalyst for its shares and contributing to a noteworthy turnaround. The Reversal Is In GameStop's (GME) - recent stock performance has shown signs of a turnaround. After a decline of more than 55% since its peak in mid-June, GameStop shares surged 13% in the trading session on November 28, with an additional 12% increase in after-hours trading. While there isn't a specific catalyst related to business fundamentals for this short-term reversal, the most plausible reason is the stock's extended stay in oversold territory since September. The 14-day Money Flow Index (MFI) has been trading below 20 for the first time since July 2019, signaling an overselling condition. Additionally, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) has been hovering very close to oversold territory since mid-October. GameStop's Earnings Just Around The Corner The recent reversal in GameStop's stock occurred just ahead of the company's Fiscal Q3 2024 earnings report scheduled for December 6. In the preceding three quarters, GameStop reported earnings per share (EPS) of 0.16 cents in January (primarily attributed to a robust holiday season), -0.17 cents in April, and -0.01 cents in July. It's important to note that the October quarter, which precedes the holiday season, poses challenges for the video game retailer chain. The third quarter is commonly a seasonally slow period for retail companies, lacking significant holidays. Furthermore, the release of major gaming consoles and blockbuster video game titles typically occurs in Q4. Consequently, consumer spending patterns may decline compared to other quarters, especially on non-essential items like gaming products. Price Momentum GME is trading near the bottom of its 52-week range and below its 200-day simple moving average. What does this mean? Investors have been pushing the share price lower, and the stock still appears to have downward momentum. This is a neutral sign for the stock's future value. Longby DEXWireNews1
A Price, A Retard, And An Impossible Number: The Ballad Of $1700Okay.. We all know who/what I am here, and if you don’t then you’re new and I welcome you. Let's imagine we're a financial entity, with: market making privileges in equity, and a large market share of order processing, meaning we could, potentially, internalize demand as liabilities (IOUs/FTDs) or let them pass through to the market. with access to all standard products, meaning we're only limited by having to find a counterpart to any financial instrument we might want to use - even bespoke instruments. a big balance sheet. a large contact network, including political, enforcement and media. a widespread reputation of "knowing what we're doing" in a field in which very few people know what they're doing. For some reason or another, we decide to short a stock - we're fairly confident that it'll go bankrupt. Why we are so confident is irrelevant - we just are. However, we're not really allowed - or it's suspicious, or just want to avoid the connection - to have a position in the securities we market-make, therefore we use our network of institutions to have a series of hedge funds - not us, but bound to us through shared ownership or debt or aligned incentives or whatever - hold the short positions for us. It's also possible that these hedge funds are taking this short position of their own volition, and we have nothing to do with it yet. The point is, this specific stock has a growing short interest. It's easy to find the shares to borrow. All broker-held shares are kept within the DTCC books, that means they're all kept in a neat pile. We can borrow from the pile/warehouse and throw a few pennies back as fees. We then sell these stocks to retail, so the stocks end up right back on the borrowable pile - they never "leave" the brokerage, and the brokerage stores them in the same pile. We're adding a liability (the short stock) and an asset (the cash) on our sheet. They're fungible, and it's all happening in aggregate and behind closed doors, so nobody has actual proof - hell, nobody has reason to suspect in the first place, since the stock in question is a "bad stock," according to the news, and so the collective meme says it should go down. Since each sold stock goes back to the pile, there's no shortage to the borrowable supply, and therefore no reason for the interest fee to go up. We can keep pointing at a share, using that share to create a liability, receive cash, and then point at the same share again. Also, if we occasionally/often fail to deliver/borrow, who's gonna notice, let alone stop us, right? In essence: Customer bids/demands a share. The bid is routed to us by the broker. We grab a share from the borrowable pile - add this to liabilities. We add this same share to the customer's assets. We also take the customer's cash from their assets, and drop it in our assets. The customer's share is stored in the borrowable pile, thanks to the broker, so the pile's size hasn't changed. Result: Demand is satisfied. The borrow pile is unchanged. Our liabilities grow. Supply is not reduced. We took the customer's cash. We just need to be careful about the reporting methodology - make sure everything's tidy when the picture's taken, and as long as the pile is large enough relative to the daily volume, it's foolproof. Alright fantastic, each sale is free money, and the sold stock goes right back for-sale. Unnoticed, we're actually recycling the supply. The demand, on the other side, isn't - buyers need actual cash to buy, and that shit runs out. With endless supply and limited demand, the price goes down. Price going down should increase demand, but as long as the price is expected to continue going down, then that's neutered - people don't buy because the price is low, but because they expect it to rise. Besides, more demand means more sales, and more profit, yes? Eventually, we're confident the company will go bankrupt, and then we'll just be left with two piles: one of cash, and one of worthless liabilities, valued at 0. Pure profit, no need to even pay taxes, since we didn't really close our positions. Then, two things happen. First, some schmuck begins actually looking at the numbers - "bad stock" meme isn't enough for him, and he realizes that the stock is too cheap, related to the fundamentals. He begins buying and spreading the word, which challenges our preferred meme. Suddenly, there's a narrative of counter-culture/resistance around buying the stock, it's seen as giving us the middle finger, and the kids think that's cool. Whatever, let's underestimate them. The second thing to happen, is that another guy - this one actually has three commas, so he's a bit more difficult to deal with - buys a bunch of the stock, and declares his intent to become an activist investor. He maneuvers intelligently, and before long, he's chairman of the board. While we're good at making memes for boomers, this dude is good at making internet-native memes, and he, without ever actually interacting directly with the community, manages to cement himself as a trustworthy, competent figure, opposed to wall street and internet savvy. He outlines a turnaround plan which actually - independently of everything else - makes sense, and he brings the drive and level of compromise a founder figure can provide, as opposed to distant institutional owners. Now, a short position is a leveraged position, meaning we can be margin called if our unrealized losses exceed our collateral. Therefore, as the stock price stops going down, and begins going up, we have to begin to actually monitor the stock price and the short position size, versus the rest of our assets - and not all assets, but those considered high quality liquid assets, and therefore valid collateral. The way this works is, different asset types get assigned different weightings: the more liquid and risk-free the asset, the higher it counts. Cash is completely accounted, at 100%, but a risky bond might be counted at 10% only. Some assets might not count at all. The difference between the average short-sale price, and the current market price, multiplied by the short position size, can't exceed our high quality liquid assets, or we get a margin call. Liability: Current Market Price * Position Size, the value of the equities owed Assets: Average Sold Price * Position Size, the cash we got for the sales Our collateral must be greater than the difference between these. `(Average Sold Price - Current Market Price) * (Position Size) < = Value of HQLA Suddenly, demand - which has been growing steadily thus far - spikes. This has gone viral, and the transacted volume goes insane - way beyond what we can handle. The daily demand is bigger than the pile, so we're forced to let some of it through. Our methods had not been stress tested before, and thus we slipped. This means the price starts increasing, which fuels both more demand - from FOMO - and more supply - from people who consider the stock overvalued, and an easy short. The internal supply chains break, suddenly everyone's getting margin requirement notifications. The brokers don't necessarily know what's happening, all they know is that they sold a lot of the stock, and before they can turn around and buy it from us, the price has doubled - margin requirements go up! So, seeing this, trading is stopped at the broker level - they literally can't afford to owe any more shares. The apple store is out of apples. Close only. We, however, can keep selling, and we do. No new long positions, only new short positions - perfect, the price has to go down, regardless of the demand! The price falls down, the news spin this as a squeeze that's now over. The price falls all the way down to 40$, and then something breaks. Someone gets a margin requirement they can't meet, or someone places a buy order that's large enough, or something else happens, and forced buying begins, which again spikes the price. Liquidations are carried out, and at some point, these short positions end up in the market maker's books. While a hedge fund can get killed from such a spike, not us. We're a massive player, and we can sustain a lot more. We consolidate most of the short positions, to avoid any further melt-ups, and formulate an actual long-term strategy to get out of this mess. Melvin, Archegos, and others, are now dead, and we hold their books within ours. Up to now, we've had to survive by using collateral against the short positions, which means that, at a certain point, we need to liquidate non-qualifying assets, and turn them into cash (or some other acceptable form of collateral.) Therefore, when the stock price rises, we need to sell our other positions, and turn them into cash. This explains the stock's negative beta: when its price rises, we sell other stocks to raise cash, which lowers their prices. When crypto is no longer acceptable collateral, we sell it for cash, and the price dumps around June. So, in essence, the stock price has an inverse correlation to the price of anything else in our books that's not collateral. However, this isn't the best way to handle this - this is affecting the rest of our business, and won't work in a longer timeframe. Since we're a market maker, we don't really need to do the whole song and dance around borrowing shares, and holding collateral we can just directly create them as liabilities. This is the famous Fail to Deliver - they marked your assets and their liabilities, but that's it. Also, instead of being worried about collateral we're now worried about solvency. Okay so we turn around to security based swaps/total return swaps. What are these? They're a piece of paper that's worth the difference between the values/returns of two securities. I can then replace the shorts vs. collateral method with swaps. No need to bother so much with high quality collateral, since whatever's on the other side of the swap essentially functions as collateral - I only need collateral for the difference. I can get a negative exposure on the stock price, against a positive exposure on the overall market. This way, if both go up together, then it makes no difference to me. Likewise if they both go down together. Any decrease in value from the movement of one is offset by the movement in the other. Let's assume our swap is done against a broad market basket and call it the counterweight (CW.) Now, instead of the stock and the market having an inverse correlation, they have a positive one. If the stock goes up 10%, then as long as the CW also goes up 10%, then the value of the swap hasn't changed. I don't have to massively sell anything, it's less suspicious, reporting rules are way more relaxed, the enforcement agency is much more, uh, amenable to my proposals. This works both for being long stock vs short market, or long market vs short stock - I can finetune my exposure both ways. Importantly, what before were these counter-cyclical spikes, are now pro-cyclical. Has the stock gone up? Nah, it's the whole market, nothing suspicious! While before we counteracted the demand with short-selling, now we just fail to deliver - essentially neutralizing demand. Sure, that's even more troublesome, but nobody's ever paid any mind to Dr. Trimbath before, why would they start now? So if anyone buys the stock, we just add that to our liabilities, without it impacting actual market supply/demand. We can selectively decide to let some demand pass, in case we need to raise the price. What this brings about, then, is a delicate balance: we can let demand for the stock reach the market, in which case the price increases. we can let demand for the stock go to our liabilities directly, in which case the price decreases. Then, we can observe demand/supply, and have an algorithm decide which % of purchases to deliver. Monitor social media. Bullish sentiment? Sell them calls, and reduce the delivery % (let the spot purchases go directly to the balance sheet) - price doesn't rise. Bearish sentiment? Do the opposite. So now If the stock's demand goes up, we can decide whether to lower the delivery %, through which we avoid a price increase, but in exchange become more levered. We want the price to be as high as possible, up to the point in which we get margin called - the ceiling. Therefore, we'll deliver as much as we can, and start FTDing when the price gets too high. If the stock's demand goes down, we can decide to increase the delivery %, through which we lower our leverage, but in exchange the price doesn't go down. We don't want low prices: more people will buy, and we'll lower our average entry price. Therefore, we'll reduce leverage as much as we can. We might prefer to lower the price, but that'd depend on more meme-manipulative strategies, and not market-based ones. Therefore, we observe demand + supply, and decide what % to internalize, and what % to externalize, thereby controlling the price. Depending on how big of an institution we are, we might be able to do the same, to a lesser extent, to the CW itself. Say, if we processed 70% of all orders, who's to say we can't nudge the S&P a bit, eh? Even if we can't, though, that's unimportant. If the CW's price goes up, that gives us more breathing range. We can tolerate a higher ceiling stock price without danger, so we'll internalize less, reducing leverage, and increasing the price, until we reach the new, heightened ceiling. If the CW's price goes down, that gives us less range. We can tolerate a lower ceiling high stock price or risk a margin call, so we'll have to internalize more, and become more levered, but lowering the stock price. Alternatively, we may choose to pump the CW - a couple million hitting the ask at the right moment should be enough. We have, then, two variables of import: the CW's price, over which we may or may not have a degree of influence. the stock price, which results from demand, which we observe, and % of FTDs, which we control. In this way, short selling is something we long stopped doing. Did the shorts close? Not really, but who cares. The question is whether we still have an exposure to the stock price, regardless of the mechanism. Up to now we have a nice little model. It's not infallible: our control over the variables might not be perfect, and if demand doesn't stop we'll eventually be in trouble, but these dudes need to eat - wait long enough, and they'll get discouraged. A split, you say? The size of my liabilities hasn't changed. Yeah, they're 4 times as many stocks, but IDGAF about stock number - I care about the notional size of the position. "In the shape of a stock dividend"? Yeah, nope. Spread some confusion about it. What can they do? Yeah, they'll seethe, but they've already been seething all along. If someone in an actual position of power comes around, we'll send some guys in suits to dazzle them with words. Who will they believe, the suits, or cherrypicked examples of particularly stupid apes? We like the chaos. The more chaos, the more tiring it is to find the truth, and the longer we can get away with shit. Unless the company withdraws from our system. In which case, I have no idea, because the debate shifts over to the legal battleground instead. What else could threaten us? Well. You know what. DRS. (Direct Registration of shares) Moving these lendable shares out of brokers hands, and off of the DTCC. On one hand, if 100% of the shares are accounted for outside our system, then we're suddenly on the defensive. Now they don't really have to care about what we say the price is, do they? They could separate completely, accounting for all the shares, and trade within a separate system. What would we do with the deluge of DRS that'll hit? I have no idea, but it seems like the supply/demand equivalent of dividing by zero. On the other hand, every share removed is, essentially, forcefully accounted demand. Say, you buy a share, I drop it on liabilities and FTD, and then you DRS it, then you're indirectly increasing leverage, since (total shares in books/actual shares in my vault, "the ratio") just got reduced by one on both the numerator and denominator. Do that enough times, and since the numerator is higher than the denominator, we're gradually increasing the ratio, which makes the effect of demand on price have a larger magnitude. How? Because the ratio is also the ratio in which I transform demand into either a price increase or leverage. When we turn demand into price increase or leverage, the rate at which that happens is that ratio - the more we DRS, the higher the "cost" of turning demand into price or leverage. Meaning, the more we DRS, the more violent price changes will be, and the more magnified the leverage assumed will be. DRS 100%, and that rate becomes Therefore, a separate market observer might want to consider two indicators as endgame conditions: the DRS percentage + its rate of change, which can be proxied by the price of the stock, against some measure of how much free cash retail has, because this determines the speed of DRS. The lower the price, and the more available cash, the faster DRS will increase. the price of the stock, against the CW (let's assume a broad market index of multiple asset classes.) If the stock outpaces the market, then we know the swaps are closer to breaking - this will have two possible effects: every time except the last, it will cause the stock price to go down, or the market prices to go up, to keep the swaps alive. eventually, the swaps will die, and then the stock will go up, and the CW go down, in a self-reinforcing de-leveraging. So now what the hell happens? I have no clue. I wouldn't want to find out, either. I'd take more and more risky moves. If at one point I'd have been careful about the legality of my moves, then by the end that wouldn't really matter much. Might even want to try to get political power to leverage that. After a certain point, the capital market problem spills over into the legal, social, memetic, political. Whoever's managing this shitshow hasn't slept well in a while, I can guarantee that. Let’s see how this Ballad continues/pans out, If you made it down here I commend you for at least taking the time in reading this.To all of my Retards, I will see you on Banana Planet. Longby Captain_CamUpdated 232356
The Rise of GameStop Memes: A Revolutionary Approach to CryptoThe world of cryptocurrency is witnessing an intense battle for a 100x return on investment, with Meme Coins leading the charge. While coins like Avalanche (AVAX) and Shiba Inu (SHIB) have been in the spotlight, there is a new contender that is turning heads and intriguing investors with its unique approach – GameStop Memes (GSM). Avalanche has experienced a remarkable surge, with its prices skyrocketingan astonishing 200% between October and November. This upward trend can be attributed to strategic announcements and partnerships that have ignited bullish momentum. The recent introduction of Avalanche 2.0, aimed at enhancing speed, integration, and interoperability, positions the network to become a robust foundation for the trillion-dollar crypto industry. Partnering with industry giants like JPM, Citi, Wisdom Tree, T.Rowe Price, and KKR has further opened doors for broader adoption and institutional exposure. On the other hand, GameStop Memes takes a different path. Instead of relying on partnerships and technological advancements, GSM leverages the power of community-driven dynamics and meme culture to create a distinctive appeal that goes beyond the traditional crypto narrative. By doing so, GSM positions itself as an accessible and engaging option for a diverse range of investors. Shiba Inu, however, has taken a different approach to increase its token’s value. The strategy of burning tokens aims to lower the quantity in circulation, but its effectiveness remains a subject of debate within the crypto community. With a large circulating supply in the trillions, significant token destruction is necessary to have a substantial impact on SHIB’s price. While recent increases in SHIB burn rates are noteworthy, they have only affected a negligible portion of the total supply. In contrast, GameStop Memes has found success through its unique blend of humour-driven community engagement and solid tokenomics. The project’s focus on meme culture and its incorporation into everyday life resonates with investors looking for transparency and practical investment options. As GameStop Memes continues to make waves in the crypto space, it has raised $2 million in just 24 hours during its presale phase, showcasing its potential. With its innovative and community-driven approach, GSM stands as a revolutionary player in the crowded crypto landscape. Beyond the allure of rapid gains, the project integrates practical utility, making it a dark horse that could disrupt the market with its rebellious nature and potential for 100x returns. Longby DEXWireNews6
Massive Falling wedge on GME weekly!!!!!!!!!!!!!Just wanted to point out that GME has now reached the end of this massive falling wedge on the WEEKLY. A breakout of this wedge could be absolutely massive to the upside. Also, the last time the Ultimate RSI was this low, shortly after we seen a 155%, $19 to $50 spike in just 14 days. With new legislation for reporting short positions and the pressure on the Hedgies to finally close out, this could be the move everyone has been anticipating. Not to mention the massive amount of DRS'd shares we have been seeing. Grab your fav snack and bev because the extravaganza is about to begin. GLTYA, and happy trading ✌️Longby impossiblebull121220
$GME - MehHad multiple false positives over the past several months that showed this stock might've done something. This includes the latest false positive showing something happening this week. imgur.com Although it appears to be strong, it's still very likely a false positive. I had some money on this but i've exited my calls and gone for puts instead as i see it possible that this thing goes to $10.30 in the next 12 weeks. As i previously said, i won't be mentioning future GME runs. Only mentioning this one and the last few failed ones since they're done/failed. Too few people interested in this ticker, too many people holding stock and silently overtrading it for it to ever do anything significant at this point imo.by leenixusu557
GME: Buy idea: Spring effectOn GME as you see on the chart we have a good spring effect on vwap indicator so it's mean that we will have a hight probability to have an uptrend.Thanks!Longby PAZINI193
Potential Inverted Head & Shoulders - GMEHere I have GameStop stock on the 4Hr Chart exhibiting signs of a potential Head & Shoulders pattern! GME hit its 52-Week Low last Monday so I believe this could be a great area for a potential reversal in the Bullish direction! www.tradingview.com The Neckline @ 14.30 has been tested twice now, once after the creation of the "Left Shoulder" and again after the creation of the "Head". Now what I expect for GME is for price to come down for the creation of the "Right Shoulder" with Pattern Invalidation at 12.90! -Pattern Prediction- *If price Breaks Down and Closes Below 12.90, pattern INVALIDATED! *If price Breaks Up and Closes Above 14.30, price action initiates my Trade Action Plan!Longby Novi_FibonacciUpdated 4411
Not a gme guy but maybe just maybe calls go brr next week??GME Seems to be trying its hardest break daily trend line and has already surpassed 9 ema (best ema, dont even try convincing me otherwise) if we get above 9 ma on weekly from some volume this week I think it will get violent not next week but the week after. Will be watching closely. Not financial advise, just my thoughts Longby Lolimbad3
GME: Buy ideaBuy idea on GME as you see on the chart because we have the breakout with force the vwap indicator and the resistance line by a big green candle follow by a large green volume.Thanks!Longby PAZINI193
GME: Buy ideaBuy idea on GME as you see on the chart because we have the breakout with force the vwap indicator by a big green candle with a large green volume.Thanks!Longby PAZINI19775
this makes senseThis is a common sense trade, buy about 12-13$ and sell in 23$. December will be gigant sales in gamingLongby DanyBoy4k223
GME Weekly Death CrossThe weekly death cross on GameStop is nothing to play around with. A death cross is when the 200 moving average (red) crosses below the 50 ma (green) The first 2 times the death cross occurred (yellow circles) GME witnessed a 43% drop and 90% drop respectively. In the week of August 7, 2023, GME had its third death cross. Will the death cross play out and GME see more downside or is this a bull flag? With time, price movement will reveal itself. Currently GME has been in a downtrend since 2021. And for one full year the 50 ma has been acting as resistance and pushing price down. On another observation, if this downward channel, after a parabolic rise of 8,200% is a bull flag, then we need to carefully monitor which way price beaks out of this channel. Will it break below the channel and invalidate the bull flag, or will it break above the channel and possibly head higher? Longby babychesterUpdated 119
GME - When Will it Recovery I just watched the movie about Gamestop called 'Dumb Money', it was great and made me make this chart. Using an inverted H&S we can plot a recovery along a middle trend line at about $8by Bixley5
GME | Buy scenario | Wars and suchTLI 1 is based on a recent Swinghigh that served as a strong resistance level aswell as support in the past. In related ideas i linked to my last GME idea - sadly price didnt fullfill the requirements mentioned to take trade. So lets see if i get this time a trade. Requirements: - Price breaks above TLI 1 - Open and close of a candle above S/R Level 1 - Buy on retest of TL 1 Stop- Loss: None (Longterm play) Target: Next big resistance level Good luck Disclaimer: - This information does not constitute as financial advice and is only for educational purposes. I am not your financial advisor. - You trade entirely at your own risk - Make your own research - Finance and trading is evil, capitalism is bad, duh ;) Longby a_tale_of_bulls_and_bearsUpdated 228
GameStop: Remains In A Position to Break Bullishly From Its ZoneGME has been getting sold off with the macro for quite some time and it continues to push deeper and deeper into dangerous territory. At this point in time, it has pushed slightly below the 0.382/0.886 Confluence Zone and is now at the 200 SMA, but with that, we can see that the Local Bullish Shark can extend into a 1.618 Extension, so the Breakout watch is far from over on GME though we are getting towards levels where one may leave it alone. I would say that if GME breaks below $11.50, there would be a very distinct chance of it dumping down to $9.5, but if it instead holds above $11.5 and pushes back above $14.00, then we could instead see GME make a rapid move up to $18.00, which would be just high enough to test the supply line of our Channel/Falling Wedge. From there we could possibly break out of it and go for the measured move, but for now, I'd say one would probably want to have a short-term position to take profits on at $18.00 and a separate longer-term position to hold strong until GME gets the big measured move breakout to $74 - $134Longby RizeSenpai4421
GMEFirst target hit at weekly demand. Might look for a long in this shit stock if the weekly RSI can close above 30. Not holding my breath.by Essendy114
GME: Minuette cHave been watching this one. Thinking this is a good entry, not too big, so holdable, for now, if wrong, or it it moves up, stop at break-even. Looking for equities to strike a short-term bottom and pullback, then continue down. In the meantime, I think GME will catch the progressive retrace and rally, but when equities sour for the next many months, I think GME could thrive. Should be choppy, but over the correct horizon, I think there is long profit, here.Longby CuzDeluxUpdated 6614
gme inverse head and shoulders..the head can change.. but the target is $21. im in calls, not financial advice.Longby hamie1016
BULLISH DIVERGENCE ON WEEKLY:DOUBLE BOTTOM:MANIPULATIONAgain, more indicators of a bullish trend coming up soon. I'm not even going into explaining why I see this as one of the most undervalued stocks. The Retail interest remain high, and that is the main factor for a stock price, supply and demand dictates the price, well or it should be if market makers wouldn't cancel all the price discovery with their "providing liquidity" roles. ON the weekly we had double Bottom formation around Jan/Feb/March 2023, plus a small bullish divergence, price breaks out and them from 27 March 2023 we see a clear artificial push down . Again in June when price MACD on the Monthly was just about to turn we see another push down, this time coming to 14$.. I feel confidence on saying that this Bullish Divergence on the Weekly is the biggest confirmation (for trader, swing trades and everyone else out there trading and not investing) they should jump in on the buy side. Again, next earning early December could possibly turn this ridiculous price suppression around and we can finally see a clear and beautiful break out , Possible the Biggest ever seen. I don't expect MOASS, I expect company to keep showing good number and improvements, like they have been doing , and I expect great price swings with each news, a Tesla Effect all over again. (Remember Tesla? Enough people believed and even tho was the most shorted stock ever, that explain the 1000 NYSE:S a share , not on 1 week, with time aligned with each good news coming from them) Excited to keep following this and every week pay check buy a couple more.Longby adrianogmatosuk1111
GMERRR 1:14, EMA 200 MONTH, DEMAND entry near ema, stop loss below demand, best to enter after shadow candle, after they eat liquidityLongby Smiledew115