Exchange Currency

exhaustion gap

A gap in the price movement of a security that occurs as a security begins to experience a significant change in direction, typically from a rise to a fall. On the chart, if there is a gap between a strong rise in prices and a sudden fall in prices, it is considered an exhaustion gap. An exhaustion gap is sometimes seen as just a temporary reversal, with the stock expected to resume its climb.

Related information about exhaustion gap:
  1. Exhaustion Gap Definition | Investopedia
    An exhaustion gap usually reflects falling demand for a particular stock. The image shows a gap at the end of a large upward movement, signaling a reversal.
     
  2. Gaps and Gap Analysis - ChartSchool - StockCharts.com
    The high volume was the giveaway that this was going to be, either, an exhaustion gap or a runaway gap. Because of the size of the gap and the near doubling ...
     
  3. Exhaustion Gap - Exhaustion Gap Stock | TheStockBandit.com
    Exhaustion gaps are reversal gaps, trading exhaustion gap stocks offers profit potential.
     
  4. Gap (chart pattern) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Exhaustion gap signals end of a move. These gaps are associated with a rapid, straight-line advance or decline. A reversal day can easily help to differentiate ...
     
  5. Exhaustion Gap
    Exhaustion gaps (discussed on page 223 of the textbook) occur at the end of powerful trends. This 60-minute SPY chart shows the exhaustion gap that occurred ...
     
  6. Bulkowski's Price Gaps
    Violent reversals can follow an exhaustion gap, so consider taking a position in the new direction. Stop loss, Gaps are places of price support or resistance, ...
     
  7. Exhaustion Gap Definition & Trading Strategy
    An exhaustion gap comes at the end of an impulsive move. Exhaustion gaps are accompanied by an abnormal increase in volume, followed by a sharp reversal ...
     
  8. Exhaustion Gap - Financial Dictionary - The Free Dictionary
    In technical analysis, a gap on a chart representing a large difference in price between two succeeding trades after prices have been rising significantly.