Tuesday, February 3, 2026

MSOS Returns to the 50-Day Cycle Window

 

Above is a daily chart of MSOS with its 50-day cycle, a cycle I’ve been writing about consistently for many months now. This isn’t something I just noticed last week or retroactively drew on a chart to make myself look smart. Back on December 6th, I openly wrote that a cyclical low was likely in and that a rally should follow. And to be blunt, that call worked almost perfectly. I nailed the bottom, stepped in right where the risk/reward made sense, and rode the move higher as MSOS ripped off the lows. From an entry standpoint, it was one of my better trades.

Unfortunately, my exit was terrible.

That exit coincided with the day Trump signed the executive order, and I watched a large chunk of unrealized profits evaporate in real time. Anyone who has traded long enough knows that feeling in the pit of your stomach. You do the hard part right, waiting patiently, buying when fear is high, trusting your work and then you fumble the ball on the goal line. It was a painful reminder that having a great entry is only half the battle. The exit matters just as much, if not more. You don’t get paid for being right; you get paid for managing risk and locking in gains.

Fast forward to today, and here we are again approaching another potential opportunity. As you can see on the chart, the next cyclical low is due around February 5th, give or take a few days. Cycles aren’t magic, and they’re certainly not precise to the exact day, but they give you something incredibly valuable: a time window. Instead of guessing blindly, I know that we are entering a period where a bottom should be forming. That alone changes how I think, how I size trades, and how aggressive or patient I’m willing to be.

What continues to impress me is just how accurate this 50-day cycle has been over the past two and a half years. Every cyclical low marked in blue at the bottom of the chart is exactly the same distance apart, yet they line up remarkably well with actual market lows in MSOS. That’s not random. At some point, this cycle will lose its influence, everything works until it doesn’t, but until that happens I’m going to keep trading it because it has earned my respect.

I added to MSOS today and also picked up some TLRY. No, we haven’t received clear confirmation that the cyclical low is officially in yet. I may be early, and I know that. But I did notice some subtle signs of relative strength compared to the broader market’s action today, and that’s often how these turns begin. I’m not swinging for the fences here. I’m positioning myself where the odds start to shift back in my favor, armed with experience, humility from my last exit, and a clear plan for how I want to handle the next move.

For more analysis and market insights, visit my homepage 

Monday, February 2, 2026

MSOS Prints Its Tightest Range Since Christmas

 


Another quiet day today for MSOS, seriously, was today a holiday or something? Price action was about as sleepy as it gets, but that’s exactly why it caught my attention. Above is a daily chart of MSOS, and in the lower pane you’re not looking at volume. What you’re seeing instead is the daily range for each session. I zoomed in to make it easier to see the recent action, which is why some of the top of the chart got chopped off, but the message is still very clear.

Take a look at today’s bar. The daily range was extremely narrow, in fact, it was the tightest range we’ve seen since Christmas. When ranges compress to this degree, it usually doesn’t last long. Tight ranges tend to precede range expansion, and when that expansion finally comes, it can be fast. This is the kind of environment where I stop being bored and start getting ready.

Structurally, MSOS has now put in what I consider six consecutive lower highs. Yes, I know Friday technically took out Thursday’s high by a single tick, but I was watching it closely in real time, and we never actually saw a bid above Thursday’s high. For me, that still counts as a series of lower highs. That sequence tells me sellers have been able to cap price consistently, even though they haven’t been able to push it meaningfully lower either.

At the same time, MSOS is still holding the daily gap. That’s an important detail. Gaps often act as support on pullbacks, and the fact that we’re holding in this area suggests buyers are still defending it. This is a zone where a bounce can develop, especially if we see volatility start to expand in the right direction.

The way I’m planning to play this is pretty straightforward. I want to see a range expansion to the upside. Ideally, that comes in the form of an opening range breakout or at least early signs of relative strength compared to the broader market. If buyers step in and we start to see momentum build, I’ll be watching closely for price to push above today’s high at 4.09. If that happens with some conviction, I’ll look to grab some more shares for a possible leg higher.

For now, there’s nothing to do but stay patient and stay alert. Quiet days like this often set the stage for bigger moves. The key takeaway here is simple: be ready for range expansion, because MSOS looks like it’s coiling for its next move

For more analysis and market insights, visit my homepage 

RDW Is Back at a Level That’s Worked Before

 

Well, RDW is once again testing the 13 simple moving average of lows, and this is an area I’ve been paying close attention to. I’ve been using this moving average to successfully trade the last two pullbacks in RDW, so when price comes back to this level, it immediately gets my attention. So far, this average has acted as reliable dynamic support, and now we’re seeing another test to see if it continues to hold.

Today’s high came in at 11.73, which puts 11.75 right on my radar as a potential entry level. A clean move over that price would tell me buyers are stepping back in and that this pullback may be ending. That said, I’m not locked into one specific trigger. How we open tomorrow will matter, and I’ll be watching closely to see whether the stock shows early signs of strength. If I see relative strength compared to the broader market or an uptick in volume, I’d consider an earlier entry. As always, I want the market to confirm my thesis rather than forcing a trade.

One of the more encouraging aspects of this pullback has been the volume profile. Volume has been declining as RDW pulls back, which is exactly what I want to see during a healthy consolidation. Selling pressure appears to be easing rather than accelerating. Today’s volume, in particular, was noticeably lighter than what we’ve seen in recent sessions, and that suggests sellers are becoming less aggressive at these levels.

However, there is one thing that continues to give me pause. Four days ago, RDW printed a very high-volume green candle. That kind of volume stands out, and it often marks an important reference point on the chart. The issue is that we’re currently trading below the low of that candle. When price drops below the low of a high-volume up day, it raises the bar for the next move higher. In order for RDW to push higher from here, I want to see volume really start to pick up again. Without that renewed participation, there’s a risk that any bounce could be short-lived.

For now, I’m staying patient and letting the chart do the talking. The 13 simple moving average of lows is being tested again, volume on the pullback has been constructive, and I have clear levels in mind. If RDW can reclaim momentum with expanding volume, I’ll be interested. If not, there’s no rush. I’d rather miss a trade than step in before the conditions are fully aligned.

For more analysis and market insights, visit my homepage 


HYPD on Watch as Volume Leads Price

 


HYPD is a stock I currently have on my radar as a potential breakout candidate, and the more I study the chart, the more interested I become. Above is a daily chart of HYPD along with the On Balance Volume indicator, shown in yellow and right away there are several technical clues that suggest this stock may be setting up for a meaningful move.

The first thing that jumps out to me is the double bottom on the daily chart. For my style of trading, this is often one of the earliest signals that a downtrend is losing steam and a possible trend change is developing. After a prolonged move lower, seeing buyers step in twice at roughly the same level tells me that demand is starting to outweigh supply. It doesn’t guarantee higher prices, but it does put the stock on my watchlist and shifts my focus from looking for shorts to watching for long setups.

Another important piece of the puzzle is the tight sideways range HYPD has been trading in for the past five weeks. Price has been coiling in a relatively narrow band, and in my experience, tight consolidations like this often precede a volatility expansion. The longer and tighter the base, the more meaningful the move can be once price finally breaks out. To me, this looks like a stock that is storing energy rather than distributing shares.

From a price perspective, the key level I’m watching is 4.40. A clean break and hold above that level would mark a breakout from the range and signal that buyers are taking control. What makes this setup especially interesting, however, is what’s already happening under the surface with volume.

The On Balance Volume line has already broken out, even though price itself has not yet done so. OBV is a reflection of volume flow, and the fact that it’s moving higher tells me that accumulation is already taking place. Over the past five trading days, we’ve seen heavier volume come into HYPD, and that buying pressure is being captured by the OBV indicator.

I often view OBV as a leading indicator, and in this case, it appears to be hinting that higher prices could follow once price confirms with a breakout. When volume leads and price follows, that’s a combination I like to see. For now, HYPD remains firmly on my radar, and I’m encouraged by how the technical pieces are lining up. Now it’s simply a matter of letting the chart confirm and seeing how things play out.

For more analysis and market insights, visit my homepage 


GME Is Finally Starting to Shape Up

 

It was a strong day for GME right from the opening bell, and the stock never really looked back. GME closed up over 8% on the day, and what stood out to me the most was how decisive the move was. This wasn’t a slow grind higher or a late-day squeeze,  buyers were in control early and that strength carried through the close.

Above is a daily chart of GME, and for the first time in a while, it’s finally starting to shape up in a constructive way. A couple of months ago, GME formed a clear double bottom in the $20 area. At the time, it was easy to be skeptical because the stock had already burned a lot of traders earlier in the year. But this is exactly how meaningful bottoms tend to form, quietly with plenty of disbelief along the way. That $20 level held twice, and since then the stock has been working higher in a much more orderly fashion.

What really has my attention now is the volume. Over the past 10 trading days, volume has been steadily increasing as the stock moves higher. That’s exactly what I want to see when a base starts to resolve. Rising price combined with expanding volume tells me this move isn’t just a lack of sellers — it’s actual demand coming in. To me, that adds credibility to the breakout attempt we’re seeing now.

As far as resistance goes, the next key area I’m watching is the $28 level. This is where GME failed back in early October, and it’s an obvious spot where sellers could show up again. Markets have memory, and former failure points often become the next test when momentum builds. Based on the current volume profile and the strength of today’s move, I think that’s exactly where we’re headed next.

Nothing is guaranteed, of course, but the combination of a confirmed double bottom, improving structure, and rising volume puts the odds in favor of higher prices. For now, GME looks like a stock that’s finally waking up again.

For more analysis and market insights, visit my homepage 


INTC Starting to Act Like a Leader

  Above is a daily chart of INTC , and in the lower pane I’m using SPY for comparison. One of the things I’m always looking for is relative...