One Year Low
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Indicator Description
Some investors believe that One Year Low is a good indicator of how the value of a stock is elastic during the trading year. It offers a good perspective on equity performance compared to trading within industry, sector, category, or even the entire market. For example, if a stock is at its One Year Low with local stock market index is not at its One Year Low, that stock is said to be under-performing the market. On the other hand, if the price of a stock is reached a new One Year Low, an investor may interpret it as a turning point and trade the instrument away or go short.
One Year Low is the lowest price that a given equity instrument has reached in the last 52 weeks. In other words it is the lowest price that investors were willing to pay for the asset over the past 52 weeks of trading. Year Low can be used as a naive indicator of how a given equity may perform over the longer-term investment horizon.
One Year Low | = | Lowest Price in the Last 52 Weeks |
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