In this episode of StockCharts TV‘s The MEM Edge, Mary Ellen reviews the short-, intermediate-, and long term outlook for the S&P 500 after last week’s bullish late-week price action. She also examined the Dow’s out-performance this month and which stocks are ...

A slowdown can sometimes be a good thing. That was the general thinking behind the market when the much-awaited GDP report was released on Thursday. The data showed that the US economy grew less than analysts expected; the overall economy ...

An interesting Seasonality Timing System was developed by Yale Hirsh of the Stock Trader’s Almanac. It was based upon the observation that stock market seasonality is broken into two six-month periods. The favorable period begins on November 1 and ends ...

Below is just one of several headlines about stagflation we have seen this week. From April 27, 2023, TheStreet.com: “Stagflation Risks In Focus As U.S. Economy Slows, But Inflation Stays High” “The coveted soft landing is looking increasingly difficult to achieve and ...

On this week’s edition of Moxie Indicator Minutes, TG takes you inside the Moxie Indicator trading room to show you how he’s been navigating this week of large up and down moves. It has been a fun and interesting several ...

Earnings news from big cap Nasdaq stocks like Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (FB, used to be Facebook) have been pushing up the capitalization-weighted indices, as well as the share price of QQQ, the ETF which tracks the Nasdaq 100 Index. In ...

The PCE rises (although far from the 8% peak). The GDP falls (is contraction of the economy over?). Meanwhile, stagflation persists along with the trading ranges in indices and many sectors. Plus, the theory we have been expounding on (a ...

On this week’s edition of Stock Talk with Joe Rabil, Joe shows an approach to swing trading that allows a trader to take smaller risks and, as a result, enter and exit more quickly. The goal is to identify compression ...

WASHINGTON — The US economy likely continued to grow at a solid clip in the first quarter (Q1), driven by strong consumer spending at the beginning of the year, but momentum appears to have since waned considerably as the effects ...

LONDON/PARIS — The world’s top consumer goods companies, making everything from instant noodles to soap and ice cream, are paying less for their raw materials and energy, but it may take time before shoppers see significantly lower price tags for ...