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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3-page paper focuses on relative strength of stocks, and whether this is a good tool for measuring the value of a stock. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTstocrele.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
make a good stock (or not, as the case may be). One of the tools used by investors is dubbed relative price performance, also known as persistence, or price persistence.
Price persistence of a stock isnt much different from its relative strength, as both are calculated by taking the percentage price change
of a particular stock during a set period of time, then ranking it against other stocks on the market (InvestorWords.com, 2007). But
the question were asking here is the effectiveness of relative strength (or persistence) when it comes to investments. Before answering this question, its a good idea to determine what, exactly,
a stocks relative strength is about. Relative strength, in its most basic form, deals with a stocks price, and its percentage change
as compared to some standard, like the Dow Jones Industrial Ranking or the S&P 500 (Little, 2007). Relative strength is also expressed as percentages -- in other words, if a
stock carries a relative strength of 75, it means it has outperformed 75% of the stocks its compared with over a specified period of time (Little, 2007). Relative strength tends
to examine a stocks past history, and project it onto a potential future activity. Given this basic definition, its clear that the
higher the relative strength number, the higher the performance of a given stock (Little, 2007). Given its simplicity, and given its apparent logic, is relative strength a viable tool for
use on all stocks? The answer here is, yes and no. Yes, it makes some logic when a stock has consistently outperformed
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