Super noob question here. When you guys are looking at stock charts, what date range are you typically looking at? (1 day vs 5 day vs 1 year, etc). and why?
>>1931272
I just click a random ones and pick whichever I think is going to get me a lambo
Here check out my sweet TA chart
>>1931272
Depends on what kind of decision you want to make.
>>1931272
The longer I've been watching a stock or a currency, the smaller the date range.
>>1931282
Coiners: 'Buy the dip pussy'
>>1931669
>it's just a correction
>buying more, get your helmets ready we're going to the moon
>don't pussy out now
>we're going to the moon... right... right guys?
>sad pepe.jpg
>"I lost my lifesavings on crypto, what do?"
>>1931272
I generally try to maximize the number of days I can see for a given intraday timeframe. 1 day gives no reference at all and 5 days is very short. 20-30 days gives you a month / month and a half's worth of data and gives you a good idea for what's been happening with the stock. Even if you use 20-30 days regularly, you should check the daily chart to put everything in context.
Depends on what your doing. If your day trading or swing trading, smaller time frames are more helpful. If your going for long term value you may not be as concerned about the intraday or day cycles. It all can be important but different timeframes are more important depending on how long you plan your trade for.
>>1931272
charts dont tell shit