This scan will give you linear/smooth/non-choppy trends which are great for pullback trades for working people.
#BroTip
If you want to trade only stocks with established trend/momentum, then you can look for stocks which have never(or barely did) closed below a certain MA (say 50MA) in the last say 50 days.
— Manas Arora (@iManasArora) November 8, 2021
There are countless ways to run scans. Just have to get creative. #BroTip
More from Manas Arora
“Take uncomfortable size with tight stop. Go big. Press. Destroy your average”
Exactly what you are seeing me do for months now.
Exactly what you are seeing me do for months now.
This is the \u2018missing piece\u2019 to your successful trading/investing puzzle. Print it. Paste it. Read it everyday. Applies to life too!
— Manas Arora (@iManasArora) November 23, 2020
- By someone Anonymous #BroTip pic.twitter.com/OTdewdZ5d1
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Viruses and other pathogens are often studied as stand-alone entities, despite that, in nature, they mostly live in multispecies associations called biofilms—both externally and within the host.
https://t.co/FBfXhUrH5d
Microorganisms in biofilms are enclosed by an extracellular matrix that confers protection and improves survival. Previous studies have shown that viruses can secondarily colonize preexisting biofilms, and viral biofilms have also been described.
...we raise the perspective that CoVs can persistently infect bats due to their association with biofilm structures. This phenomenon potentially provides an optimal environment for nonpathogenic & well-adapted viruses to interact with the host, as well as for viral recombination.
Biofilms can also enhance virion viability in extracellular environments, such as on fomites and in aquatic sediments, allowing viral persistence and dissemination.
Viruses and other pathogens are often studied as stand-alone entities, despite that, in nature, they mostly live in multispecies associations called biofilms—both externally and within the host.
https://t.co/FBfXhUrH5d
Microorganisms in biofilms are enclosed by an extracellular matrix that confers protection and improves survival. Previous studies have shown that viruses can secondarily colonize preexisting biofilms, and viral biofilms have also been described.
...we raise the perspective that CoVs can persistently infect bats due to their association with biofilm structures. This phenomenon potentially provides an optimal environment for nonpathogenic & well-adapted viruses to interact with the host, as well as for viral recombination.
Biofilms can also enhance virion viability in extracellular environments, such as on fomites and in aquatic sediments, allowing viral persistence and dissemination.