Price Action Is King, But Volume Is Queen

 | Mar 15, 2019 02:59AM ET

In the short to intermediate-term trading system we run in our nightly report The Wagner Daily, price action is king but volume is very important. Moving averages can help with entries and exits, as well as defining the trend, but that’s about it. Anything added to that tends to make the decision process more difficult.

In the spirit of keeping it simple, we are going to discuss one of the ways we use volume to alert us of a potential low-risk entry point in a stock we are monitoring.

Generally speaking, when monitoring a stock for an entry, we first want to see a considerable drop off in volume. If looking to quantify the dry up, then a 10-day low in volume is fine, but there is no rule other than there should be a noticeable dry up from earlier trading.

We especially take notice when the dry up in volume coincides with a contraction in price over one or a few days. When price and volume contract, the next move may not always be in the direction we want, but if the market is healthy and we are in the right industry groups, more often than not the stock will move in our favor.

Let’s run through a few examples below:

YETI Holdings (NYSE:YETI)– Note the dry up in volume at (A), (B) and (C). At (A), there is a dry up in volume and a pullback in price to the 10-day MA, but no move out as the price action just chops around for a few days. At (B) there is a narrow ranged day of trading (a few of them) along with another dry up in volume at the 20-day EMA. Any move off this area that clears the 10-day MA is buyable or as we often say “in play”. At (C), the volume once again dries up, with the price chopping around in a tight range, making a move through the highs of the tight range buyable.