When the market falls from its high, does it mean it's oversold? What about if it keeps making a new high daily? Is it then overbought?
Technical analysts—individuals who make decisions based on chart signals, not the fundamentals of a company’s business—often turn to certain indicators that assess oversold or overbought conditions. Here we discuss four common ones:
For example, in June 2022, the S&P 500 was dragging along its lower band while the RSI was nearing oversold conditions. Money flows were still not in oversold territory, although they continued to drop over the next sessions—appearing to lag the other two indicators. And the VIX started retreating, falling below that important 40 mark.
And while it may be tempting to make buy or sell decisions based on technical indicators like these, we prefer a different approach because we’re in it for the long haul.
Instead, we employ fundamental analysis to pick what we believe to be quality companies that we feel have the potential to perform well over the long term, regardless of short-term market conditions. The reason is simple: These short-term trends, we believe, are less relevant, particularly when you compare them to a chart like this...
Source: Multpl.com, data as of Aug. 4, 2023