Blow-Off Top

  

Categories: IPO, Investing, Charts, Trading

Investors might be ready to blow their tops when they see a chart pattern with a steep rise in prices, followed by a rapid drop.

A blow-off top often happens after a big news announcement or rumors about an exciting initial public offering (IPO) that turns out to be...all hype.

Let’s say Miracle Pharmaceuticals had some promising clinical trials for a drug to cure diabetes. Word spreads rapidly that they are going to get approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) any day now, so their stock shoots for the sky. Then news spreads through the grapevine that the clinical trial volunteers are starting to grow an extra finger, so the price tanks rapidly.

If you bought at the top, “experts” say you will just have to hold the stock for the long term, or sell at less of a loss the next time it bounces up a bit. The key to identifying a blow-off top before it’s too late is to look at volume. You’ll see a large increase right before it hits a peak, with a massive sell-off as it starts to go down.

Other tips for picking a potential blow-off top is to see if the stock has had few if any dips in price for at least 6 months, and has gone up by 100-500% or more.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is a hot issue?2 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop What is ah hot issue All right

00:07

Well it's one that has demanded more than it is

00:09

supplied One that is loved more than it is hated

00:13

One that is hot more thin it's gold Well the

00:16

most common hot issue in the press You read about

00:18

all the time Yeah It's an aipo that everybody wants

00:22

Why Well it's basically free money to the investors Price

00:27

talk has been ten to twelve dollars a share And

00:29

well then it looks like it's moved twelve to fifteen

00:31

and out price doc's fifteen to eighteen a share And

00:34

traders are mumbling that the first actual traded print will

00:38

be something like forty dollars a share So anyone who

00:41

buys at that eighteen dollars price or really any price

00:44

upto thirty thirty two thirty five something like that Well

00:47

they'll make a massive return for one day's work just

00:50

flipping their stock Tio you no longer term holders I

00:54

think about the real estate show where they flip houses

00:57

you know Well they have to do a whole lot

00:58

of work to flip a house on stocks are a

01:00

lot easier Well why do hot issues even happen Well

01:03

often banks purposely underprice i pose to quote pay the

01:08

street unquote for taking risk and buying that aipo handsomely

01:13

like they price it low Lots of people are going

01:15

to buy it have a low cost basis and remember

01:17

it fondly Well cos generally play along instead of selling

01:21

say thirty forty fifty percent of themselves to the public

01:24

in there i po well they only sell ten percent

01:27

and later on they'll sell more when the stock is

01:29

popped and traded and settled and has a buying public

01:32

and all the other good things that go with it

01:34

so and only a tiny amount of shares out there

01:36

trading even modest demand can drive prices to the sky

01:41

and this phenomenon happens Ah lot ebay snap facebook A

01:45

whole bunch of others essentially created hot issues by offering

01:49

very tiny fractions of ownership of themselves to the public

01:52

in there i po so that the enormous buyer interest

01:55

almost guarantees more demand than supply of the security being

01:59

sold and hot issues as you guess our great well 00:02:03.51 --> [endTime] until they're not

Up Next

Finance: What is Breakaway Gap?
7 Views

What is a Breakaway Gap? A breakaway gap is the point in time when a stock price changes direction (it goes from increasing to decreasing or vice v...

Finance: What is an Aggressive Growth Fund, A GO GO Fund, A High Octane Fund?
58 Views

What is an Aggressive Growth Fund, A GO GO Fund, A High Octane Fund? An aggressive growth fund (also referred to as GO GO or high octane) is a type...

Finance: What is a Chartist?
26 Views

What is a Chartist? A chartist is a trader and/or analyst who relies on technical analysis and charts in order to make decisions for trading the ma...

Finance: What is Technical Analysis?
12 Views

Technical analysts don't care how companies make their money or how they run their business; they're just interested in the numbers. The data. Yeah...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)