This means that:
-
Attractive buy candidates
with large upsides and small downsides
will be towards the lower right in the R:R
chart.
-
Dangerous-to-buy, or
sell candidates with high risk and low reward
potential will be in the upper left quadrant.
Think of the chart as a baseball diamond. Home plate
is at the 0%-up and 0%-down end of the black square, in the lower left
corner. If you want to score, you have to get on first base. But in this
game, you score when you get to third, not home. It's the stocks that
get out in left field that you want to watch out for, and the foul balls
outside of the 3rd base line. Stocks right of the first base line are
usually attractive, but an extreme foul ball over there should be played
with caution. Colliding with the stands could end your career.
Now consider the sample R:R
Chart of the Dow Jones Industrials Average (click on the thumbnail above).
The numbers in the playing field are the stocks in the DJIA, with their
ticker symbols indicated in the blue field to the right. More than
one company may be at any point, so symbols without numbers share the
last number above them.
We have color coordinated
the playing field to compare with the colors on the Block
Trader Forecast charts. When stocks are low in their range (green),
they have much more upside than downside. Stocks at the top of their ranges
(or beyond) are in red.
As a stock approaches that danger area it is shown in
yellow.
The Reward:Risk
chart helps discriminate between stocks with differing degrees of uncertainty.
A subtlety of the chart deals with stock volatility. Calm stocks (oils,
utilities) typically populate the infield, with co-ordinates in the 5%
to 15% up and down area. Hyper stocks (Software, Semiconductor) are usually
in the 15%-25% outfield, and have much further to travel between the right
field and left field foul lines. Again using
the baseball diamond analogy, a stock with 20% upside and 20% downside
will be out in center field. One with 10% each way will be on second base.
The second-base stock travels
a shorter path as it goes from first to third, producing less return,
but sometimes a safer one. The centerfield stock may look really great
at the right-field foul line, but needs to be handled carefully when it
starts getting in deep left field, as it usually does. A good portfolio
often has a balance of stocks across the array of uncertainty.
Below the R:R chart of DJIA,
select any of 50 different groups of related stocks using the drop down
menu 
Note also the button:
This combo box allows you to select any of the stocks in the above R:R
chart, and look at their BTF Chart histories. Simply clicking on
the button without specifying any one stock pulls up
each of the stocks in alphabetic order.
These features are an aid in looking for new stocks to buy.
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