diff --git "a/072d3845-d4b5-44a5-b4f3-e92006dcd072.json" "b/072d3845-d4b5-44a5-b4f3-e92006dcd072.json" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/072d3845-d4b5-44a5-b4f3-e92006dcd072.json" @@ -0,0 +1,40 @@ +{ + "interaction_id": "072d3845-d4b5-44a5-b4f3-e92006dcd072", + "search_results": [ + { + "page_name": "How to Use Stock Volume to Improve Your Trading", + "page_url": "https://www.investopedia.com/articles/technical/02/010702.asp", + "page_snippet": "Volume is a simple yet powerful way for traders and investors to increase profits and minimize risks.Comparing volume today to volume 50 years ago might provide irrelevant data. The more recent the data sets, the more relevant they are likely to be. Volume is often viewed as an indicator of liquidity, as stocks or markets with the most volume are the most liquid and considered the best for short-term trading; there are many buyers and sellers ready to trade at various prices. Trading volume is a measure of how much a given financial asset has traded in a period of time. For stocks, volume is measured in the number of shares traded. For futures and options, volume is based on how many contracts have changed hands. Traders look to volume to determine liquidity and combine changes in volume with technical indicators to make trading decisions. Looking at volume patterns over time can help get a sense of the strength of conviction behind advances and declines in specific stocks and entire markets. The same is true for options traders, as trading volume is an indicator of an option\u2019s current interest. In fact, volume plays an important role in technical analysis and features prominently among some key technical indicators. When analyzing volume, there are usually guidelines used to determine the strength or weakness of a move. As traders, we are more inclined to join strong moves and take no part in moves that show weakness\u2014or we may even watch for an entry in the opposite direction of a weak move.", + "page_result": "\n\t\t\t\t\n\n\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t \n \n \n\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nHow to Use Stock Volume to Improve Your Trading\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\n\t\t\t\t\t\n\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\n\n\t\t\n\n\n\n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n
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\n\nTable of Contents\n
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\n\nTable of Contents\n\n\n\n
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    \nBasic Guidelines for Using Volume\n
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    \nThree Volume Indicators\n
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    \nWhat Is the Most Common Time Frame for Measuring Volume in Stocks?\n
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    \nWhat Are Some Popular Volume Indicators?\n
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    \nWhat Trading Signals Can Be Provided by Volume?\n
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    \nIn the Case of a Pullback, How Can Volume Be Interpreted?\n
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    \nThe Bottom Line\n
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  • \nStock Trading\n\n\n\n
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\nHow to Use Stock Volume to Improve Your Trading

\n
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\nBy\n
\nCory Mitchell\n
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\nFull Bio\n
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\nCory Mitchell, CMT is the founder of TradeThatSwing.com. He has been a professional day and swing trader since 2005. Cory is an expert on stock, forex and futures price action trading strategies.\n
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Updated February 23, 2024
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\nTrading volume is a measure of how much a given financial asset has traded in a period of time. For stocks, volume is measured in the number of shares traded. For futures and options, volume is based on how many contracts have changed hands. Traders look to volume to determine liquidity and combine changes in volume with technical indicators to make trading decisions.\n

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\nLooking at volume patterns over time can help get a sense of the strength of conviction behind advances and declines in specific stocks and entire markets. The same is true for options traders, as trading volume is an indicator of an option\u2019s current interest. In fact, volume plays an important role in technical analysis and features prominently among some key technical indicators.\n

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\nKey Takeaways

\n
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  • Volume measures the number of shares traded in a stock or contracts traded in futures or options.
  • Volume can indicate market strength, as rising markets on increasing volume are typically viewed as strong and healthy.
  • When prices fall on increasing volume, the trend is gathering strength to the downside.
  • When prices reach new highs (or no lows) on decreasing volume, watch out\u2014a reversal might be taking shape.
  • On-balance volume (OBV) and the Klinger oscillator are examples of charting tools that are based on volume.
\n
\n
\n

Basic Guidelines for Using Volume

\n

\nWhen analyzing volume, there are usually guidelines used to determine the strength or weakness of a move. As traders, we are more inclined to join strong moves and take no part in moves that show weakness\u2014or we may even watch for an entry in the opposite direction of a weak move.\n

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\nThese guidelines do not hold true in all situations, but they offer general guidance for trading decisions.\n

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1. Trend Confirmation

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\nA rising market should see rising volume. Buyers require increasing numbers and increasing enthusiasm to keep pushing prices higher. Increasing price and decreasing volume might suggest a lack of interest, and this is a warning of a potential reversal. This can be hard to wrap your mind around, but the simple fact is that a price drop (or rise) on little volume is not a strong signal. A price drop (or rise) on large volume is a stronger signal that something in the stock has fundamentally changed.\n

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2. Exhaustion Moves and Volume

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\nIn a rising or falling market, we can see exhaustion moves. These are generally sharp moves in price combined with a sharp increase in volume, which signals the potential end of a trend. Participants who waited and are afraid of missing more of the move pile in at market tops, exhausting the number of buyers.\n

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\nAt a market bottom, falling prices eventually force out large numbers of traders, resulting in volatility and increased volume. We will see a decrease in volume after the spike in these situations, but how volume continues to play out over the next days, weeks, and months can be analyzed by using the other volume guidelines.\n

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3. Bullish Signs

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\nVolume can be useful in identifying bullish signs. For example, imagine volume increases on a price decline and then the price moves higher, followed by a move back lower. If, on the move back lower, the price doesn\u2019t fall below the previous low, and if the volume is diminished on the second decline, then this is usually interpreted as a bullish sign.\n

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4. Volume and Price Reversals

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\nAfter a long price move higher or lower, if the price begins to range with little price movement and heavy volume, then this might indicate that a reversal is underway, and prices will change direction.\n

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5. Volume and Breakouts vs. False Breakouts

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\nOn the initial breakout from a range or other chart pattern, a rise in volume indicates strength in the move. Little change in volume or declining volume on a breakout indicates a lack of interest and a higher probability for a false breakout.\n

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6. Volume History

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\nVolume should be looked at relative to recent history. Comparing volume today to volume 50 years ago might provide irrelevant data. The more recent the data sets, the more relevant they are likely to be.\n

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Volume is often viewed as an indicator of liquidity, as stocks or markets with the most volume are the most liquid and considered the best for short-term trading; there are many buyers and sellers ready to trade at various prices.

\n
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Three Volume Indicators

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\nVolume indicators are mathematical formulas that are visually represented in the most commonly used charting platforms. Each indicator uses a slightly different formula, and traders should find the indicator that works best for their particular market approach.\n

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\nIndicators are not required, but they can aid in the trading decision process. There are many volume indicators to choose from,\u00a0and the following provides a sampling of how several of them can be used.\n

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1. On-Balance Volume (OBV)

\n

\nOn-balance volume (OBV) is a simple but effective indicator. Volume is added (starting with an arbitrary number) when the market finishes higher or subtracted when the market finishes lower. This provides a running total and shows which stocks are being accumulated. It can also show divergences, such as when a price rises but volume is increasing at a slower rate or even beginning to fall.\n

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\n

2. Chaikin Money Flow

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\nRising prices should be accompanied by rising volume, so Chaikin Money Flow focuses on expanding volume when prices finish in the upper or lower portion of their daily range and then provides a value for the corresponding strength.\n

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\n

\nWhen closing prices are in the upper portion of the day\u2019s range, and volume is expanding, values will be high. When closing prices are in the lower portion of the range, values will be negative. Chaikin Money Flow can be used as a short-term indicator because it oscillates, but it is more commonly used for seeing divergence.\n

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3. Klinger Oscillator

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\nFluctuation above and below the zero line can be used to aid other trading signals. The Klinger oscillator sums the accumulation (buying) and distribution (selling) volumes for a given time period.\n

\n
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\n\n

What Is the Most Common Time Frame for Measuring Volume in Stocks?

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Daily volume is the most common time frame used when discussing stock volume. Average daily trading volume is the daily volume of shares traded, averaged over a number of days; this smooths out days when trading volume is unusually low or high.

\n
\n
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\n\n

What Are Some Popular Volume Indicators?

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Popular volume indicators include three mentioned above\u2014on-balance volume (OBV), Chaikin Money Flow, and Klinger oscillator\u2014as well as the volume price trend indicator and Money Flow Index.

\n
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\n\n

What Trading Signals Can Be Provided by Volume?

\n

Volume patterns provide an indication of the strength or conviction behind price advances or declines for a stock or sector or even the entire market. An advance on increasing volume is generally viewed as a bullish signal, while a decline on heavy volume can be interpreted as a bearish signal. New highs or lows on decreasing volume may signal an impending reversal in the prevailing price trend.

\n
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In the Case of a Pullback, How Can Volume Be Interpreted?

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In the case of a pullback in a stock or market, the volume should be lower than it is when the price is moving in the direction of the trend, typically higher. Lower volume indicates that traders do not have much conviction in the pullback, and it may suggest that the market\u2019s upward trend could continue, making the pullback a buying opportunity.

\n
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\n

The Bottom Line

\n

\nVolume is a handy tool to study trends, and as you can see, there are many ways to use it. Basic guidelines can be used to assess market strength or weakness, as well as to check if volume is confirming a price move or signaling that a reversal might be at hand. Indicators based on volume are sometimes used to help in the decision process. In short, while volume is not a precise tool, entry and exit signals can sometimes be identified by looking at price action, volume, and a volume indicator.\n

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\nArticle Sources
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\nInvestopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our\neditorial policy.\n
\n
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    \n
  1. The Review of Financial Studies via North Carolina State University Repository. "Stock Prices and Volume," Pages 2, 36.

  2. \n
  3. Edwards, Robert D., W. H. C. Bassetti, and John Magee. "Technical Analysis of Stock Trends, Tenth Edition," Pages 181-184. Taylor & Francis, 2012.

  4. \n
  5. Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. "Trading Volume as a Market Indicator."

  6. \n
  7. Journal of Forecasting via Wiley Online Library. "Trading Volume and Prediction of Stock Return Reversals: Conditioning on Investor Types' Trading: Abstract."

  8. \n
  9. Trading View. "Volume."

  10. \n
  11. Joseph E. Granville. "Granville\u2019s New Key to Stock Market Profits," Chapter 3. Papamoa Press, 2018.

  12. \n
  13. Chaikin Analytics. "Chaikin Money Flow."

  14. \n
  15. TD Ameritrade Learning Center. "Klinger Oscillator."

  16. \n
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\nRelated Terms
\n
\n
\nKlinger Oscillator: What it is, Formulas, Calculations\n
\nThe Klinger Oscillator is a technical indicator that combines prices movements with volume. The indicator uses divergence and crossovers to generate trade signals.
\nmore\n
\n
\n
\n
\nDown Volume (or Down on Volume): What It Means for a Security\n
\nDown volume refers to a decrease in a security\u2019s price in conjunction with a high volume of trading. Down volume may indicate a change in direction of a price trend.
\nmore\n
\n
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\nFlag Definition\n
\nA flag is a technical charting pattern that looks like a flag on a flagpole and suggests a continuation of the current trend.
\nmore\n
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\nUptrend in Technical Analysis: How to Trade and Examples\n
\nUptrend is a term used to describe an overall upward trajectory in price. Many traders opt to trade during uptrends with specific trending strategies.
\nmore\n
\n
\n
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\nBreadth of Market Theory: Meaning, Example, and Limitations\n
\nThe breadth of market theory is a technical analysis method for gauging market direction and strength.
\nmore\n
\n
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\nIntraday Intensity Index: What It Means and How It Works\n
\nThe Intraday Intensity Index is a volume-based technical indicator that integrates volume with a security\u2019s price.
\nmore\n
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\t\t\n\n\t\t\n", + "page_last_modified": "" + }, + { + "page_name": "Flex Ltd. (FLEX) Stock Price, News, Quote & History - Yahoo Finance", + "page_url": "https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/FLEX/", + "page_snippet": "Find the latest Flex Ltd. (FLEX) stock quote, history, news and other vital information to help you with your stock trading and investing.Analyst Report: Flex LtdFlex is the largest global provider of electronic manufacturing services (EMS) and related competencies. In addition to its core printed circuit board (PCB) assembly and systems assembly businesses, the company provides design, logistics, components, enclosures and PCB manufacturing. In addition to its core printed circuit board (PCB) assembly and systems assembly businesses, the company provides design, logistics, components, enclosures and PCB manufacturing. Flex has expanded its customer base from OEM companies in traditional electronics and technology to nontraditional niches, such as consumer, medical and instrumentation, aerospace-defense and automotive. Group President Rebecca Sidelinger sold 13,675 shares of Flex Ltd (NASDAQ:FLEX) on February 23, 2024, according to a recent SEC Filing.", + "page_result": "Flex Ltd. (FLEX) Stock Price, News, Quote & History - Yahoo Finance
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Flex Ltd. (FLEX)

NasdaqGS - NasdaqGS Real Time Price. Currency in USD
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Chart Events
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Bearishpattern detected
\"MACD\"/

MACD

Previous Close27.80
Open27.42
Bid27.75 x 900
Ask27.76 x 1000
Day's Range27.21 - 27.92
52 Week Range19.44 - 30.75
Volume493,035
Avg. Volume5,495,759
Market Cap11.759B
Beta (5Y Monthly)1.17
PE Ratio (TTM)16.62
EPS (TTM)1.68
Earnings DateMay 08, 2024 - May 13, 2024
Forward Dividend & YieldN/A (N/A)
Ex-Dividend DateN/A
1y Target Est30.43
Fair Value is the appropriate price for the shares of a company, based on its earnings and growth rate also interpreted as when P/E Ratio = Growth Rate. Estimated return represents the projected annual return you might expect after purchasing shares in the company and holding them over the default time horizon of 5 years, based on the EPS growth rate that we have projected.
Fair Value
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70% Est. Return

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\"\"
  • Flex Ltd.
    Analyst Report: Flex LtdFlex is the largest global provider of electronic manufacturing services (EMS) and related competencies. In addition to its core printed circuit board (PCB) assembly and systems assembly businesses, the company provides design, logistics, components, enclosures and PCB manufacturing. Flex has expanded its customer base from OEM companies in traditional electronics and technology to nontraditional niches, such as consumer, medical and instrumentation, aerospace-defense and automotive.
    Rating
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    Economic Moat
    27 days agoArgus Research
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\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", + "page_last_modified": "" + }, + { + "page_name": "FLEX Price | USD converter, Charts | Crypto.com", + "page_url": "https://crypto.com/price/flex", + "page_snippet": "FLEX USD Price Today - discover how much 1 FLEX is worth in USD with converter, price chart, market cap, trade volume, historical data and more.FLEX\u2019s price today is US$0.5903, with a 24-hour trading volume of $99,671. FLEX is +0.00% in the last 24 hours.FLEX has a circulating supply of 98.66 M FLEX and a max supply of 100 M FLEX. CoinFLEX claims to average around 200-400mm USD of trading volume daily. ... If you are new to crypto, use the Crypto.com University and our Help Center to learn how to start buying Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies. To check FLEX's price live in the fiat currency of your choice, you can use Crypto.com's converter feature in the top-right corner of this page.", + "page_result": "FLEX Price | USD converter, Charts | Crypto.com

Coins:\u00a0
20,003
Market Cap:\u00a0
$2,378.75 B USD
24H Change:\u00a0

+5.22%

24H Volume:\u00a0
$120.32 B USD
Dominance:\u00a0
BTC: 50.37%, ETH: 16.98%
ETH Gas:\u00a0
82 Gwei

\"FLEX\"

FLEX

FLEX

Add to Watchlist

$1.90 USD

N/A

(24H)

0.00003716 BTC

-5.28%

(24H)

FLEX Price Chart (USD)

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Market Cap (USD)

$187.04 M

24H VOLUME (USD)

$134,258

Circulating Supply

98.66 M FLEX

Max Supply

100 M FLEX

Total Supply

98.66 M FLEX

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General Information

Contract Address

  • \"icon\"

    Ethereum

    0xfcf8eda095e37a41e002e266daad7efc1579bc0a

About FLEX

Rank #309

FLEX Price Summaries

Latest Data

FLEX\u2019s price today is US$1.90, with a 24-hour trading volume of $134,258. FLEX is +0.00% in the last 24 hours.FLEX has a circulating supply of 98.66 M FLEX and a max supply of 100 M FLEX.


Launched on July 4, 2019. FLEX is the coin that powers CoinFLEX, a physically settled futures exchange. CoinFLEX claims to average around 200-400mm USD of trading volume daily.

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FLEX Price Statistics

FLEX Price

$1.90

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\"FLEX\"

FLEX

1 FLEX = 1.90\u00a0USD

Rate is for reference only. Updated

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  • \"icon\"

    Ethereum

    0xfcf8eda095e37a41e002e266daad7efc1579bc0a

FLEX Price Statistics

FLEX Price

$1.90

24h high / 24h low

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Flex Ltd. (FLEX)

NasdaqGS - NasdaqGS Real Time Price. Currency in USD
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27.92+0.12 (+0.43%)
As of 10:35AM EST. Market open.
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Gain actionable insight from technical analysis on financial instruments, to help optimize your trading strategies
Chart Events
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Bearishpattern detected
\"MACD\"/

MACD

Previous Close27.80
Open27.42
Bid27.75 x 900
Ask27.76 x 1000
Day's Range27.21 - 27.92
52 Week Range19.44 - 30.75
Volume493,035
Avg. Volume5,495,759
Market Cap11.759B
Beta (5Y Monthly)1.17
PE Ratio (TTM)16.62
EPS (TTM)1.68
Earnings DateMay 08, 2024 - May 13, 2024
Forward Dividend & YieldN/A (N/A)
Ex-Dividend DateN/A
1y Target Est30.43
Fair Value is the appropriate price for the shares of a company, based on its earnings and growth rate also interpreted as when P/E Ratio = Growth Rate. Estimated return represents the projected annual return you might expect after purchasing shares in the company and holding them over the default time horizon of 5 years, based on the EPS growth rate that we have projected.
Fair Value
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  • Flex Ltd.
    Analyst Report: Flex LtdFlex is the largest global provider of electronic manufacturing services (EMS) and related competencies. In addition to its core printed circuit board (PCB) assembly and systems assembly businesses, the company provides design, logistics, components, enclosures and PCB manufacturing. Flex has expanded its customer base from OEM companies in traditional electronics and technology to nontraditional niches, such as consumer, medical and instrumentation, aerospace-defense and automotive.
    Rating
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    27 days agoArgus Research
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\n\nTable of Contents\n
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\n\nTable of Contents\n\n\n\n
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  • \n
    \nBasic Guidelines for Using Volume\n
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    \nThree Volume Indicators\n
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    \nWhat Is the Most Common Time Frame for Measuring Volume in Stocks?\n
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    \nWhat Are Some Popular Volume Indicators?\n
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    \nWhat Trading Signals Can Be Provided by Volume?\n
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    \nIn the Case of a Pullback, How Can Volume Be Interpreted?\n
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    \nThe Bottom Line\n
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  • \nStock Trading\n\n\n\n
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\nHow to Use Stock Volume to Improve Your Trading

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\nBy\n
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\nCory Mitchell, CMT is the founder of TradeThatSwing.com. He has been a professional day and swing trader since 2005. Cory is an expert on stock, forex and futures price action trading strategies.\n
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\nTrading volume is a measure of how much a given financial asset has traded in a period of time. For stocks, volume is measured in the number of shares traded. For futures and options, volume is based on how many contracts have changed hands. Traders look to volume to determine liquidity and combine changes in volume with technical indicators to make trading decisions.\n

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\nLooking at volume patterns over time can help get a sense of the strength of conviction behind advances and declines in specific stocks and entire markets. The same is true for options traders, as trading volume is an indicator of an option\u2019s current interest. In fact, volume plays an important role in technical analysis and features prominently among some key technical indicators.\n

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\nKey Takeaways

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  • Volume measures the number of shares traded in a stock or contracts traded in futures or options.
  • Volume can indicate market strength, as rising markets on increasing volume are typically viewed as strong and healthy.
  • When prices fall on increasing volume, the trend is gathering strength to the downside.
  • When prices reach new highs (or no lows) on decreasing volume, watch out\u2014a reversal might be taking shape.
  • On-balance volume (OBV) and the Klinger oscillator are examples of charting tools that are based on volume.
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\n

Basic Guidelines for Using Volume

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\nWhen analyzing volume, there are usually guidelines used to determine the strength or weakness of a move. As traders, we are more inclined to join strong moves and take no part in moves that show weakness\u2014or we may even watch for an entry in the opposite direction of a weak move.\n

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\nThese guidelines do not hold true in all situations, but they offer general guidance for trading decisions.\n

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1. Trend Confirmation

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\nA rising market should see rising volume. Buyers require increasing numbers and increasing enthusiasm to keep pushing prices higher. Increasing price and decreasing volume might suggest a lack of interest, and this is a warning of a potential reversal. This can be hard to wrap your mind around, but the simple fact is that a price drop (or rise) on little volume is not a strong signal. A price drop (or rise) on large volume is a stronger signal that something in the stock has fundamentally changed.\n

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2. Exhaustion Moves and Volume

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\nIn a rising or falling market, we can see exhaustion moves. These are generally sharp moves in price combined with a sharp increase in volume, which signals the potential end of a trend. Participants who waited and are afraid of missing more of the move pile in at market tops, exhausting the number of buyers.\n

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\nAt a market bottom, falling prices eventually force out large numbers of traders, resulting in volatility and increased volume. We will see a decrease in volume after the spike in these situations, but how volume continues to play out over the next days, weeks, and months can be analyzed by using the other volume guidelines.\n

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3. Bullish Signs

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\nVolume can be useful in identifying bullish signs. For example, imagine volume increases on a price decline and then the price moves higher, followed by a move back lower. If, on the move back lower, the price doesn\u2019t fall below the previous low, and if the volume is diminished on the second decline, then this is usually interpreted as a bullish sign.\n

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4. Volume and Price Reversals

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\nAfter a long price move higher or lower, if the price begins to range with little price movement and heavy volume, then this might indicate that a reversal is underway, and prices will change direction.\n

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5. Volume and Breakouts vs. False Breakouts

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\nOn the initial breakout from a range or other chart pattern, a rise in volume indicates strength in the move. Little change in volume or declining volume on a breakout indicates a lack of interest and a higher probability for a false breakout.\n

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6. Volume History

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\nVolume should be looked at relative to recent history. Comparing volume today to volume 50 years ago might provide irrelevant data. The more recent the data sets, the more relevant they are likely to be.\n

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Volume is often viewed as an indicator of liquidity, as stocks or markets with the most volume are the most liquid and considered the best for short-term trading; there are many buyers and sellers ready to trade at various prices.

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Three Volume Indicators

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\nVolume indicators are mathematical formulas that are visually represented in the most commonly used charting platforms. Each indicator uses a slightly different formula, and traders should find the indicator that works best for their particular market approach.\n

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\nIndicators are not required, but they can aid in the trading decision process. There are many volume indicators to choose from,\u00a0and the following provides a sampling of how several of them can be used.\n

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1. On-Balance Volume (OBV)

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\nOn-balance volume (OBV) is a simple but effective indicator. Volume is added (starting with an arbitrary number) when the market finishes higher or subtracted when the market finishes lower. This provides a running total and shows which stocks are being accumulated. It can also show divergences, such as when a price rises but volume is increasing at a slower rate or even beginning to fall.\n

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2. Chaikin Money Flow

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\nRising prices should be accompanied by rising volume, so Chaikin Money Flow focuses on expanding volume when prices finish in the upper or lower portion of their daily range and then provides a value for the corresponding strength.\n

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\nWhen closing prices are in the upper portion of the day\u2019s range, and volume is expanding, values will be high. When closing prices are in the lower portion of the range, values will be negative. Chaikin Money Flow can be used as a short-term indicator because it oscillates, but it is more commonly used for seeing divergence.\n

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3. Klinger Oscillator

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\nFluctuation above and below the zero line can be used to aid other trading signals. The Klinger oscillator sums the accumulation (buying) and distribution (selling) volumes for a given time period.\n

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What Is the Most Common Time Frame for Measuring Volume in Stocks?

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Daily volume is the most common time frame used when discussing stock volume. Average daily trading volume is the daily volume of shares traded, averaged over a number of days; this smooths out days when trading volume is unusually low or high.

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What Are Some Popular Volume Indicators?

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Popular volume indicators include three mentioned above\u2014on-balance volume (OBV), Chaikin Money Flow, and Klinger oscillator\u2014as well as the volume price trend indicator and Money Flow Index.

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What Trading Signals Can Be Provided by Volume?

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Volume patterns provide an indication of the strength or conviction behind price advances or declines for a stock or sector or even the entire market. An advance on increasing volume is generally viewed as a bullish signal, while a decline on heavy volume can be interpreted as a bearish signal. New highs or lows on decreasing volume may signal an impending reversal in the prevailing price trend.

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In the Case of a Pullback, How Can Volume Be Interpreted?

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In the case of a pullback in a stock or market, the volume should be lower than it is when the price is moving in the direction of the trend, typically higher. Lower volume indicates that traders do not have much conviction in the pullback, and it may suggest that the market\u2019s upward trend could continue, making the pullback a buying opportunity.

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The Bottom Line

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\nVolume is a handy tool to study trends, and as you can see, there are many ways to use it. Basic guidelines can be used to assess market strength or weakness, as well as to check if volume is confirming a price move or signaling that a reversal might be at hand. Indicators based on volume are sometimes used to help in the decision process. In short, while volume is not a precise tool, entry and exit signals can sometimes be identified by looking at price action, volume, and a volume indicator.\n

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\nArticle Sources
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\nInvestopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our\neditorial policy.\n
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    \n
  1. The Review of Financial Studies via North Carolina State University Repository. "Stock Prices and Volume," Pages 2, 36.

  2. \n
  3. Edwards, Robert D., W. H. C. Bassetti, and John Magee. "Technical Analysis of Stock Trends, Tenth Edition," Pages 181-184. Taylor & Francis, 2012.

  4. \n
  5. Charles Schwab & Co., Inc. "Trading Volume as a Market Indicator."

  6. \n
  7. Journal of Forecasting via Wiley Online Library. "Trading Volume and Prediction of Stock Return Reversals: Conditioning on Investor Types' Trading: Abstract."

  8. \n
  9. Trading View. "Volume."

  10. \n
  11. Joseph E. Granville. "Granville\u2019s New Key to Stock Market Profits," Chapter 3. Papamoa Press, 2018.

  12. \n
  13. Chaikin Analytics. "Chaikin Money Flow."

  14. \n
  15. TD Ameritrade Learning Center. "Klinger Oscillator."

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\nRelated Terms
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\nKlinger Oscillator: What it is, Formulas, Calculations\n
\nThe Klinger Oscillator is a technical indicator that combines prices movements with volume. The indicator uses divergence and crossovers to generate trade signals.
\nmore\n
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\nDown Volume (or Down on Volume): What It Means for a Security\n
\nDown volume refers to a decrease in a security\u2019s price in conjunction with a high volume of trading. Down volume may indicate a change in direction of a price trend.
\nmore\n
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\nFlag Definition\n
\nA flag is a technical charting pattern that looks like a flag on a flagpole and suggests a continuation of the current trend.
\nmore\n
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\nUptrend in Technical Analysis: How to Trade and Examples\n
\nUptrend is a term used to describe an overall upward trajectory in price. Many traders opt to trade during uptrends with specific trending strategies.
\nmore\n
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\nBreadth of Market Theory: Meaning, Example, and Limitations\n
\nThe breadth of market theory is a technical analysis method for gauging market direction and strength.
\nmore\n
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\nIntraday Intensity Index: What It Means and How It Works\n
\nThe Intraday Intensity Index is a volume-based technical indicator that integrates volume with a security\u2019s price.
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