Thursday, December 11, 2025

MSOS Surges After-Hours as the 50-Day Cycle Continues to Deliver

 


Above is a 15-minute chart of MSOS, and it clearly shows an explosive after-hours move sparked by a well-timed evening news catalyst. What makes this especially interesting is how it aligns with the 50-day cycle I highlighted last week, a cycle that bottomed two weeks ago and has been playing out with impressive accuracy ever since.

Cycles can be tricky, but when you find one that repeatedly marks meaningful turning points, it becomes something worth paying close attention to. In this case, the 50-day cycle suggested that MSOS was due for a reversal, and so far the price action has confirmed that idea almost perfectly. From the cycle low, buyers have stepped in consistently, pushing the ETF higher and showing clear signs of accumulation beneath the surface.

Today’s after-hours surge only strengthens the case. A catalyst hitting at the right moment often accelerates a move that was already building, and that appears to be exactly what’s happening here. If the cycle continues to unfold as expected, MSOS could rally into at least the end of the month.

What happens tomorrow (Friday) and how we close the week will be especially important. A strong finish would reinforce the cycle’s validity and set the stage for continued upside momentum. Either way, MSOS is giving us a fascinating real-time example of how timing cycles and catalysts can combine to create powerful moves. 

You can read my post from last week regarding the cycle right here.

How Relative Strength Revealed Today’s Big Move in GDX

 


Using Relative Strength to Track Money Flow: A Clear Example From Today’s Market Action

Today offered a textbook lesson in how relative strength can reveal where money is truly flowing, often before the broader market shows its hand. When you compare a strong stock or ETF to a benchmark like the SPY, you can spot early signs of accumulation, rotation, or weakness. GDX (the gold miners ETF) delivered a perfect real-time example of this on the 3-minute chart.

At the open, marked as Point A, both SPY and GDX rallied together. This is normal, broad markets lift most assets in the first moments of trading. But what happened afterward is where the edge appears. As the morning progressed, the momentum in SPY faded. By Point B, SPY pushed down to fresh intraday lows, giving the impression of a weak market and suggesting that risk-off pressure might continue.

But look closely at GDX during that exact moment. Instead of following SPY lower, GDX held firm and printed a significantly higher low compared to Point A. This is the essence of relative strength divergence: the market shows weakness, yet a specific asset refuses to break down. When this occurs, it’s often because buyers are quietly stepping in accumulating shares even as the broader market struggles.

This higher low was your first major clue that GDX was not just stable, it was under accumulation. Money was flowing into gold stocks while the overall market weakened. That kind of divergence is one of the most powerful tells a trader can use.

Shortly after forming that higher low, GDX pushed up through resistance. Once that level broke, the ETF continued to rally steadily into the early afternoon. Traders who recognized the divergence early had a clean setup and a strong trend to ride. Relative strength not only identified where buyers were focused, but also helped anticipate the direction of the next move.

The story becomes even more compelling when you zoom out. Looking at the daily chart, you’ll see that this intraday relative strength move wasn’t just noise, it actually triggered a breakout on the higher timeframe. That means the strength we saw on the 3-minute chart was part of a broader shift in demand for gold stocks.

This is exactly why relative strength is so valuable. It helps you see where money is flowing before the breakout becomes obvious to the crowd. Today’s action in GDX was a clean, powerful example of how watching divergences can guide you directly to the strongest opportunities in the market.

For more relative strength insights and recent market posts, visit the homepage at The Relative Strength Trader

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Spotting Winners: CTSH Shows What True Relative Strength Looks Like


 

CTSH: A Clear Lesson in Relative Strength

When analyzing market behavior, few concepts are as valuable or as consistently reliable as relative strength. Above is a daily chart of CTSH, and it provides a textbook example of how powerful this concept can be. Unlike many technical indicators that change their signals depending on the timeframe you’re viewing, relative strength delivers the same message across the board. Whether you’re looking at a 60-minute chart or a daily chart, the stock is either outperforming the market or it isn’t. That uniformity builds confidence, and confidence is crucial when making trading decisions.


Why Relative Strength Matters More Than Indicators

Most technical indicators are derived from price, yet they often contradict themselves depending on the timeframe. A stock might look bullish on the hourly chart but overbought on the daily. Signals can conflict, cross, or cancel each other out. This inconsistency makes it difficult to trust what you're seeing. Relative strength, however, strips away the noise.

At its core, relative strength shows how a stock behaves compared to the broader market or a benchmark, such as the S&P 500 ETF (SPY). If the market is pulling back but your stock is not only holding firm but making higher lows, that is a tremendous clue that buyers are quietly stepping in. It’s one of the purest forms of price analysis, and CTSH is a perfect example of why it works.


CTSH vs. SPY: A Powerful Comparison

In the lower pane of the above chart is SPY, placed there for direct comparison. Notice what happens during the most recent pullback. SPY made a clear lower low, highlighted with the white trendline. The broader market was weakening. Sellers were in control. Yet CTSH did the exact opposite, it made a significantly higher low during the same period.

That type of divergence is not random. It is a strong sign of accumulation. Institutions often build positions quietly during market dips, supporting a stock even when the rest of the market is retreating. CTSH held firm, showing impressive resilience when it mattered most.


Early Breakout Signals the Strength Behind the Move

Once SPY finally began to turn higher, CTSH wasted no time. While the market was simply recovering, CTSH was already breaking out to a new swing high. That breakout would have been a fantastic entry opportunity for anyone watching relative strength. The fact that CTSH was outperforming before the market turned gave traders a leading indicator, not a lagging one.

And the follow-through confirms the validity of the signal. Since that breakout, CTSH has continued to climb aggressively, rewarding traders who recognized the early strength and acted accordingly..


A Simple but Effective Trading Lesson

The beauty of this setup is its simplicity. No complicated indicators, no confusing overlays, just pure observation and an understanding of how strong stocks behave during weak markets. CTSH showed relative strength when the market faltered, and once the market recovered, the stock launched higher.

It’s a powerful reminder that sometimes the best trades come from simply knowing what to look for.

For more relative strength insights and recent market posts, visit the homepage at The Relative Strength Trader

IRBT Surges, but Heavy Resistance Awaits



Above is a daily chart of IRBT, and as you can see, the stock has made a remarkably strong move over the past two weeks. In that short span, IRBT has surged from roughly $1.40 to $5.55, and it has done so on exceptionally heavy volume. Any time you see a multi-week run of this magnitude, especially from a beaten-down name, it grabs your attention. The strength is undeniable, but at the same time, it’s important to stay grounded and recognize where this move is taking place in the bigger picture.

As prices push higher, IRBT is now approaching a zone of heavy overhead resistance. When you look back at the chart from last fall, the $6 level stands out clearly as an important area. On multiple occasions, this zone acted as support, holding the stock up before ultimately breaking down. Then, in March, IRBT gapped below $6 and has remained under that price for the better part of nine months. Once a stock breaks down through major support and stays below it for an extended period, that former support almost always transitions into resistance.

We already saw this play out just two months ago. IRBT rallied up toward the $6 area, tested it, and failed almost immediately, turning back lower as sellers stepped in. Now, the stock is making another run at that same level, and the reaction here should be telling. What I’ll be watching closely is how volume behaves as IRBT pushes into this zone. If volume expands on the way into resistance, it could signal increasing interest or even accumulation. But it’s equally important to stay mindful of the significance of the $6 barrier. Until the stock can convincingly clear that level, caution remains warranted.

For more relative strength insights and recent market posts, visit the homepage at The Relative Strength Trader

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Relative Weakness in Action: How BA Gave the Heads-Up

 


Today provides a clear and instructive example of relative weakness in action. Above, we have a 5-minute chart of Boeing (BA), and in the lower pane, SPY is displayed for comparison. From the opening bell, the market showed its usual volatility. During the first five minutes, BA initially moved higher, but shortly afterward, it began to sell off and then drifted sideways. Meanwhile, SPY was continuing to rally, pushing to new highs as illustrated by the white trendline.

This is where the concept of relative strength versus weakness becomes particularly valuable. When the broader market, represented here by SPY, is moving higher, most individual stocks are expected to follow suit. When a stock fails to confirm the market's move especially by putting in a lower high while the market is making a new high, it signals relative weakness. In today’s example, BA did not participate in SPY’s upward momentum. Instead, it formed a lower high, indicating that buyers were not as enthusiastic or aggressive in this stock compared to the broader market.

Relative weakness is a subtle yet powerful indicator. Traders and investors often overlook it, focusing solely on absolute price movement. However, by comparing a stock’s performance to a benchmark like SPY, one can anticipate potential downside before it fully unfolds. In this case, the lower high in BA served as an early warning that selling pressure was building and that a decline was likely imminent.

As the session progressed, BA’s weakness became more pronounced. Once support was breached and the stock broke below its intraday low, it accelerated downward. By the close, BA was essentially at the low of the day, demonstrating that the initial relative weakness was a reliable signal of what was to come. Observing this kind of pattern is invaluable because it allows traders to anticipate moves rather than react after they have occurred. Recognizing early signs of relative weakness can improve both timing and risk management, giving a trader an edge in positioning for potential declines.

Today’s chart is a textbook example of why relative weakness should never be ignored. Even when a stock moves slightly higher or drifts sideways while the market is making new highs, that lack of confirmation is meaningful. For traders who are vigilant, spotting a lower high in a stock while its benchmark is hitting new highs can serve as a signal to prepare for a sell-off. BA’s decline after the break of support perfectly illustrates how relative weakness provides an early heads-up that weakness is about to unfold, reinforcing the importance of monitoring relative performance alongside absolute price action.

CURLF Showing Relative Strength at a Key Support Level

 Above is a daily chart of CURLF , and in the lower pane I’m using a ratio line of CURLF versus MSOS to measure relative strength within t...