What's Breadth Saying About Risk?

 | Nov 19, 2014 10:09AM ET

Volume Speaks To Conviction

Since every stock trade has a buyer and a seller, stocks do not rise when there are more buyers than sellers (something that is not possible). Instead, prices rise when the conviction to buy is greater than the conviction to sell. It can be thought of this way under bullish conditions, “I am willing to sell to you, but you are going to have to pay up”. The market recently provided us with a new conviction signal via a breadth indicator tied to volume…what could it mean for stocks?

Observable Improvement

The NYSE Advance–Decline (AD) Volume indicator is calculated by taking the total volume of advancing stocks and subtracting the total volume of declining stocks. All things being equal, stock market bulls prefer to see this indicator rise. The chart below describes the recent move that is noteworthy from a risk management perspective.