Webby's Tight Indicator is used to measure a securities volatility relative to itself over time. This is achieved by taking the average of three short term ATR's (average true range) and creating a ratio versus three longer term ATR's. Mike Webster recently stated he is using the 3,5,8 for the short term ATR's and the 55,89,144 for the long term ATR's. All of the...
The Relative Strength (RS) line is something many investors are familiar with. It is used to measure a stocks performance versus the S&P 500 and is typically calculated by dividing the closing price of the stock by the closing price of the S&P. This means if a stock moves up and the S&P moves down or the stock moves up more than the S&P the RS line will increase,...
This indicator measures a stocks distance from its 52 week high. The concept is based on what Mike Webster shared on his appearance on IBD Live, allowing users to see if a current pullback from the highs is normal compared to historical pullbacks or if more attention is warranted. It is also important to pay attention to a stocks 52 week high in relation to it's...
Webby's RSI (Really Simple Indicator) 2.0 or version 5.150 as Mike himself calls it, builds upon the original Webby RSI by changing the way we measure extension from the 21-day exponential moving average. Instead using the percentage of the low versus the 21-day exponential moving average, version 2 uses a multiple of the securities 50 day ATR (average true...
Webby's RSI (Really Simple Indicator) in short MW-RSI, is simply the percentage of the low vs. the 21-day moving average. This indicator is used to gauge the health of an uptrend generally applied on major indexes like DOW, NASDAQ, SPX. As it's a bull market indicator, only positive values are shown. So if the Low goes below the 21-Day Moving Average, no value...
The Webby RSI was created by Mike Webster- All credic goes to him