For entering positions, I'd focus on a combination of these technical indicators: **For Entry Signals:** - **Moving Average Crossovers** - When a shorter-term MA (like 20-day) crosses above a longer-term MA (like 50-day), it can signal upward momentum - **RSI (Relative Strength Index)** - Looking for oversold conditions (RSI below 30) that might indicate a bounce opportunity - **MACD** - When the MACD line crosses above the signal line, especially after being in negative territory - **Volume confirmation** - Ensuring any breakout or signal is accompanied by higher-than-average volume - **Support and Resistance levels** - Entering near strong support levels or after a clean breakout above resistance **For Exit Signals:** - **Trailing stops** based on ATR (Average True Range) to let winners run while protecting against major reversals - **RSI overbought conditions** (above 70) combined with bearish divergence - **Moving average violations** - When price closes below a key moving average that previously provided support - **MACD bearish crossover** - When MACD crosses below the signal line - **Volume patterns** - Selling into high volume spikes, especially if accompanied by reversal candlestick patterns - **Predetermined risk/reward ratios** - Taking profits at 2:1 or 3:1 reward-to-risk levels The key is using multiple indicators together rather than relying on any single one, and always having a clear exit plan before entering any position. Volume confirmation is crucial for validating most technical signals.