Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
What is a breakaway gap? Does it fill? How to act after a breakaway gap?
{Current column}82People have watched
IntroductionWhat is a Breakaway Gap?A breakaway gap occurs when a stock's opening price is higher than its ...
What is Citi International Foreign Exchange Platforma Breakaway Gap?
A breakaway gap occurs when a stock's opening price is higher than its previous day's highest price or lower than its previous day's lowest price, creating a gap on the candlestick chart. For instance, if the stock closed at 1000 points yesterday and opened today at 1020 points, operating entirely above 1020 points throughout the day, that represents a complete 20-point breakaway gap. If the lowest price of the day is below 1000 points, it can only be termed as a gap-up opening, and the gap has been filled.
What Types of Breakaway Gaps Exist?
Based on the relationship between a stock's opening price and the previous day's highest or lowest price, breakaway gaps can be classified into different types.
- An upward breakaway gap forms if the opening price is higher than the previous day's highest price;
- A downward breakaway gap forms if the opening price is lower than the previous day's lowest price.
Do Breakaway Gaps Get Filled?
Breakaway gaps do not always get filled immediately. If the stock price continues to operate within the range of the gap, the gap may remain unfilled. However, sometimes the stock price returns to the gap area, fills the gap, and continues its move.
How to Operate After a Breakaway Gap Occurs?
The occurrence of a breakaway gap may indicate a sudden change in market sentiment and an acceleration in price trends. An upward breakaway gap could indicate increasing buying power, while a downward breakaway gap could indicate strengthening selling power.
Breakaway gaps are common signals in technical analysis, with investors paying attention to their occurrence and filling. However, technical analysis tools cannot guarantee future stock price movements; therefore, investors using breakaway gaps or other technical analysis tools should consider other factors, such as fundamental analysis, market conditions, and personal investment goals, and adopt appropriate risk management strategies.
Risk Warning and DisclaimerThe market carries risks, and investment should be cautious. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and has not taken into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their particular circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own responsibility.
Tags:
Related articles
'Zero capacity to save': Argentines buckle under 103% inflation By Reuters
{Current column}By Horacio Soria and Juan Carlos BustamanteBUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Argentines, painfully accustomed ...
Read moreDollar struggles to retain gains, option expiries bump yen up By Reuters
{Current column}By Vidya RanganathanSINGAPORE (Reuters) -The U.S. dollar struggled to keep gains on Monday as loomin ...
Read moreBiden administration taking heat from all sides over Louisiana LNG project By Reuters
{Current column}By Timothy Gardner and Curtis WilliamsWASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden administration faces mounting ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Tesla hikes US prices days after sixth price cut this year By Reuters
- Oil prices edge lower as demand concerns persist, more economic cues awaited By
- Oil prices rise on Middle East tensions, OPEC+ meeting in focus By
- Oil prices rise on Middle East tensions, OPEC+ meeting in focus By
- Asian stocks rise as bank fears ebb, China lags on growth doubts By
- US strikes another Houthi anti
Latest articles
-
S&P 500 gives up gains despite Microsoft
-
US conducts strikes in self
-
Thai economy in recession, needs a boost
-
Futures positioning indicates investors have started to buy China stocks By
-
U.S., China trade blame as hopes for military dialogue fade By Reuters
-
AMD cut at Northland as AI 'not as big as investors are thinking' By