thank you will be adding SCTR to my process. Funny I just have been learning more about relative strength and universes. Your making my life easier but still doing the work with all I need on one site
Thanks for the video. At the beginning, you said that you would go over the process for computing the SCTR score. But that was missing. Would you do another video about that? Also, you say that the SCTR score is relative to the other stocks in a given universe. That would seem to imply that the SCTR score for a given stock would change as other stocks in the stock's universe change. If the other stocks become stronger, the SCTR score of a given stock declines, and if the other stocks in a stock's universe become weaker, the SCTR score for that stock increases. For example, imagine, unlikely as it is, that a given stock retains a constant price over an extended period. In a bull market, in which the majority of stocks are strong, the SCTR ranking for the constant-price stock will be less than 50. Similarly, in a bear market, the SCTR score for a constant-price stock will be above 50. Is all that correct?
thank you will be adding SCTR to my process. Funny I just have been learning more about relative strength and universes. Your making my life easier but still doing the work with all I need on one site
Thank youvery much for your great presentation.
Terrific demonstration
Excellent demonstration on SCTRs Grayson, thanks for sharing.👍
3 pm shuffle, on Friday? Ouch..
Great video. Nice shirt by the way. How do SCTR scores compare to weighted alpha on different timeframes? Also can you filter by volume?
Thanks for the video. At the beginning, you said that you would go over the process for computing the SCTR score. But that was missing. Would you do another video about that?
Also, you say that the SCTR score is relative to the other stocks in a given universe. That would seem to imply that the SCTR score for a given stock would change as other stocks in the stock's universe change. If the other stocks become stronger, the SCTR score of a given stock declines, and if the other stocks in a stock's universe become weaker, the SCTR score for that stock increases. For example, imagine, unlikely as it is, that a given stock retains a constant price over an extended period. In a bull market, in which the majority of stocks are strong, the SCTR ranking for the constant-price stock will be less than 50. Similarly, in a bear market, the SCTR score for a constant-price stock will be above 50. Is all that correct?
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