FX RRG – Week 14

Stocktwits Forex RRG

Relative Rotation Graphs (RRG) are useful visual tools to identify how an instrument or a sector performs against a benchmark. The benchmark used for the FX RRG is the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY).

Without going into the nitty-gritty details, the four colored sectors can be thought of like this, so imagine you’re in a race:

  1. Leading Quadrant (green) – You are in 1st, 2nd, or 3rd place. You are leading the pack. You’re going to medal. Anthems will be sung, tears will fall, and you may or may not pass a doping test. 
  2. Weakening Quadrant (yellow) – You’re losing your momentum and out of breath. You just realized that your spouse or your mom didn’t show up to watch you, sapping your enthusiasm. You’re falling back and in the middle of the pack. 
  3. Lagging Quadrant (red) – You pulled a hamstring. You pulled a Michael Scott and ate five pounds of fettuccine alfredo an hour before your race. You fell down. You’re dead last. No anthems will be sung, but tears will fall, and no one will remember your name. 
  4. Improving Quadrant (blue) – You see your spouse or your mom in the stands. The crowd starts to see you get up. Emotional music begins, and the camera pans to the crowd in slow motion. You’re back on your feet and in the middle of the pack, gaining on the leaders. 

How analysts interpret the RRG:

The further something is from the middle, the greater, the more extended or overdone it is. 

An FX pair in the Leading Quadrant (top right) far away from the center can be a strong sign that it is extremely overbought. 

An FX pair in the Lagging Quadrant  (bottom left) and far away from the center be a strong sign that it is extremely oversold. 

Daily RRG

The gif below shows the last 10 trading days worth of movement.

Daily RRG – Click to enlarge.

Weekly RRG

The gif below shows the last 13 weeks of movement.

Click to enlarge.

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FX RRG – Week 20

Stocktwits Forex RRG

Relative Rotation Graphs (RRG) help us visualize how a currency or sector performs compared to a benchmark – in this case, the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY). Think of the four colored sectors as stages in a race:

Leading Quadrant (green) – You’re a champ! 🏆 You’re ahead of everyone else, and the crowd is cheering. But watch out; you might be overdoing it.
Weakening Quadrant (yellow) – You’re slowing down 😓 and losing your lead. Maybe you’re a bit demoralized because your biggest fan didn’t show up. You’re now in the middle of the pack.
Lagging Quadrant (red) – Disaster strikes! 😱 You’re injured, exhausted, or just made a big mistake. You’re now in last place, and it’s a sad scene.
Improving Quadrant (blue) – Time for a comeback! 💪 Your motivation returns, the music swells, and you’re picking up speed. You’re back in the middle, catching up with the leaders.

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Stocktwits Top 25 FAQ

This is a quick summary of how the Stocktwits Top 25 indexes are constructed, formatted, and released each week.

First off, these indexes are purely objective exercises. We’re not subjectively picking stocks or saying if individual stocks are good or bad. Instead, we provide an updated list of the market’s best-performing stocks (year-to-date) every week. It’s a scoreboard of the market’s current trends and a way of tracking their changes over time.
 
The lists are comprised of the index’s underlying holdings. For example, the S&P 500 uses the S&P 500 stocks. The only time we adjust the list’s underlying holdings is when the asset managers running these indexes reconstitute them (usually 2x a year) and when individual stocks drop off because of a delisting, acquisition, or any other reason they might stop trading.
 
Next, we use Google Finance to pull the data in our tables automatically. The year-to-date formula calculates each stock’s return from its closing price on the last trading day of the previous year. The week-to-date formula calculates each stock’s return from last Friday’s closing price to the current Friday.
 
Once that data is pulled each week, we adjust the tables to include the top 25 stocks in each index by year-to-date performance. Then, we list which stocks made it and which fell out of the top 25 that week.
 
The “momentum meter” for the S&P 500 list is the average week-to-date performance of the list’s 25 components. And the “Top Dawg” of the week is simply the stock with the largest week-to-date gain across all three lists.
 
After all that, we manually review the entire post and deliver it to your inbox every Saturday at ~3 pm ET.
 
As of 01/20/24, we’ve added sentiment score and watcher count to our tables to provide additional context on each symbol. This data can be found on individual symbol pages.
 
This post was created on 03/03/2023 and will be updated if/when the process changes in the future.

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The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly – Week 14

The Good

Big money is still on the long side of the Euro, and that’s reflected well in how strongly the Euro’s performed since Q4 2022. From an Ichimoku perspective, the close above the Cloud and the Tenkan-Sen show promise. Ichimoku analysts report that upside potential may continue until the $1.14 – 1.15. From there, consolidation or selling pressure may occur due to the 50% Fibonacci retracement and top of the Ichimoku Cloud (Senkou Span B) in the 1.15 value area. 

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