Amazon.com, Inc. engages in the retail sale of consumer products in
North America and internationally. It operates through the North
America, International, and Amazon Web Services segments. The company
sells merchandise and content purchased for resale from vendors, as well
as those offered by third-party sellers through retail Websites, such
as amazon.com, amazon.ca, amazon.com.mx, amazon.com.au, amazon.com.br,
amazon.cn, amazon.fr, amazon.de, amazon.in, amazon.it, amazon.co.jp,
amazon.nl, amazon.es, and amazon.co.uk. It also manufactures and sells
electronic devices, including kindle e-readers, fire tablets, fire TVs,
and echo, as well as fire phones; and provides Kindle Direct Publishing,
an online platform that allows independent authors and publishers to
make their books available in the Kindle Store.
Take a look at the 1-year chart of Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) below with the added notations:
AMZN had been pure money up until its peak towards the end of
December, but from there, the stock suffered is biggest pullback in
quite some time. Then, as AMZN rallied back up in March, the stock ended
up stalling at the same $580 (green) area that it hit as resistance
back in July and October (red). Now that AMZN has broken above that $580
area, we’d expect it to act as support on any pullbacks.
The Tale of the Tape: AMZN has a key level to watch
at $580. A long trade could be entered on a pullback down to that level,
with a stop loss placed under it. A break of the $580 support should
lead to lower prices.
No comments:
Post a Comment