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Bullish & Bearish Signals — Reading Moving Averages

Once you add the 20, 50, and 200-day moving averages to your chart, you're looking at a real-time voting system. When all three agree on direction, the trend has conviction. When they start crossing and tangling, the stock is confused — and you should be cautious.

Here's exactly what to look for.

What Each MA Tells You

20-day = what the stock is doing right now (short-term mood). 50-day = what it's been doing the past couple months (medium trend). 200-day = the big picture — where institutions decide if a stock is healthy or not.

Bullish Signals

1. Bullish Stacking Order

The #1 thing to look for. When the 20-day is on top, 50-day in the middle, and 200-day on the bottom — all sloping upward — the stock is in a strong uptrend. Think of it like a parade: the 20 is leading and everyone's following in formation.

20 MA 50 MA 200 MA BULLISH STACKING — All 3 sloping up spread

When you see this on your chart, the stock has strong momentum. The wider the spread between the MAs, the stronger the trend. This is the ideal setup for CALLS.

2. Golden Cross

When the 50-day crosses above the 200-day, that's a Golden Cross. This is a big deal — institutional algorithms watch for this and it often triggers buying. It's a longer-term signal that says "the medium trend just turned bullish against the big picture."

GOLDEN CROSS 50 below 200 50 above 200 20 MA 50 MA 200 MA

Notice how the 20-day (green) was already above both — it's the early warning. The Golden Cross just confirms what the 20 already told you. By the time you see this, the move has started, but institutions use it as a buy trigger so it often accelerates from here.

3. Price Bouncing Off a Moving Average

When price drops to the 50 or 200-day MA and bounces back up, that MA is acting like a support level. Institutions often buy at the 200-day because they see it as "fair value." If price touches it and bounces, that's a strong floor.

BOUNCE BOUNCE 50 MA 200 MA Price 200 MA acting as SUPPORT — institutions buying here

Each time the price touches the 200-day and bounces, it confirms that level as strong support. The more bounces, the more reliable the floor. If it eventually breaks through — that's a different story (see bearish signals below).

Bearish Signals

4. Bearish Stacking Order

The exact opposite of bullish stacking. When the 200 is on top, 50 in the middle, and 20 on the bottom — all sloping downward — the stock is in a confirmed downtrend. This is the setup for PUTS.

200 MA 50 MA 20 MA BEARISH STACKING — All 3 sloping down spread

This is exactly what Ed was looking at on PLTR when he identified the PUT setup. The 20-day had already dropped below the 50-day — a sign that short-term sellers were in control. When all three MAs stack bearish, the trend has full conviction downward.

5. Death Cross

The opposite of a Golden Cross. When the 50-day crosses below the 200-day, that's a Death Cross. Institutions watch for this as a sell signal. It means the medium-term trend has turned negative against the long-term backdrop.

DEATH CROSS 50 above 200 50 below 200 200 MA 50 MA 20 MA

Notice how the 20-day (green) dropped below the 200 first — that was the early warning. Then the 50-day followed and confirmed with the Death Cross. By the time you see this, the bearish thesis is strong. This is where Ed's PUTS strategy comes in.

6. Price Rejected at a Moving Average

When a stock is falling and tries to rally back up to the 50 or 200-day MA but gets rejected, that MA has become resistance. The floor is now the ceiling — same concept as support & resistance, but moving with time.

REJECTED REJECTED 200 MA 50 MA Price 50 MA flipped from SUPPORT to RESISTANCE

Each rejection confirms the MA as a ceiling. Price tries to break through, fails, and falls harder. This is a strong signal to stay in or add to PUT positions.

The MA Squeeze — Trend Change Warning

One more critical pattern: when all three MAs start squeezing together, it means the current trend is losing steam and a reversal may be coming. Wide spread = strong trend. MAs converging = get ready for a shift.

SQUEEZE ZONE wide spread narrow! 20 50 200 MAs converging = trend losing momentum

When you see the MAs squeeze tight on your PLTR chart, it means something is about to happen. The stock will either break out in the direction of the prevailing trend — or reverse. This is when you watch the Go Maz signals closely for confirmation.

Quick Reference — Your MA Checklist

Signal What You See What It Means Action
Bullish Stack 20 > 50 > 200, all sloping up Strong uptrend, full conviction CALLS territory
Golden Cross 50 crosses above 200 Medium trend turned bullish Buy signal
MA Bounce Price touches 50 or 200, goes up MA acting as support Trend confirmed
Bearish Stack 200 > 50 > 20, all sloping down Strong downtrend, full conviction PUTS territory
Death Cross 50 crosses below 200 Medium trend turned bearish Sell signal
MA Rejection Price rallies to MA, gets slapped down MA flipped to resistance Stay in PUTs
MA Squeeze All 3 MAs converging together Trend losing momentum Watch closely
Key Questions to Ask Every Time You Look at Your Chart

1. What order are the MAs in? 20 above 50 above 200 = bullish. Reversed = bearish.
2. Are they spreading apart or squeezing? Spreading = trend strengthening. Squeezing = possible reversal ahead.
3. Where is price relative to the MAs? Above all 3 = strong bull. Below all 3 = strong bear. Between them = choppy.
4. Is price bouncing off or getting rejected at any MA? That tells you which MA is acting as support or resistance.