Supply and Demand: Big Volume Demand at Key Points – In Detail 1. What is Supply and Demand in the Stock Market? At its core: Supply = Sellers (people who want to sell a stock) Demand = Buyers (people who want to buy a stock) The interaction between supply and demand determines price movement: If demand > supply → price goes up (buyers compete, pushing prices higher). If supply > demand → price goes down (sellers undercut each other, lowering prices). 2. Supply and Demand Zones These zones are areas on a chart where the price had a strong reaction in the past, indicating high supply or demand. Demand Zone (Support) A price area where buying pressure exceeded selling pressure. Price drops into this area and bounces upward. Often seen with long wicks, strong green candles, or volume spikes. Example: A stock falls to $100, then suddenly reverses to $120. The $95–$100 zone is a demand zone. Supply Zone (Resistance) A price area where selling pressure exceeded buying pressure. Price r...
how those common investor mistakes? 1. Lack of Research Investors often buy stocks based on media buzz or hot tips without understanding the company’s financials, industry, or risks. For example, buying into a tech stock just because it's trending on social media. Fix: Read earnings reports, understand the business model, and use metrics like P/E ratio, revenue growth, and debt levels. 2. Emotional Investing Market volatility can cause panic selling during dips (e.g., COVID crash) or FOMO buying during rallies (e.g., meme stocks like GameStop). Fix: Stick to a long-term strategy and avoid reacting impulsively to short-term news. 3. Poor Diversification Putting too much money into one stock or sector (e.g., all in on tech) can be dangerous if that sector crashes. Fix: Spread investments across different sectors and industries to reduce risk. 4. Timing the Market Trying to buy the dip or sell the top is almost impossible to do consistently. Most retail investors miss rebounds. Fix: U...