Let's take a look at Gaps and Fills, which are fairly well known technical indicators. A gap is exactly as it sounds, a gap between the data points of a stock's chart. Often the Daily Chart is useful for examining gaps, because there has to be some significant buying or selling pressure that causes a stock to move up or down sharply on the open on a particular day, then not "fill in" that gapped area during that trading day.
Gaps are often caused by external news events and also often are on heavy volume. The chart below as a sample shows a big gap down in Wal-Mart (WMT), which was on huge volume. The bearish gap was followed by further short-term downside. The shares did not completely fill in this gap area during the time frame examined. The gap area is now potential resistance to further upside on this chart.



The following chart of Middleby (MIDD) shows a gap up that created what is called an "island". The stock consolidated above the gap zone into an island, then breached the gap zone. Subsequently, the shares declined heavily. This is often called an "island reversal".

The next chart, also of MIDD, shows a recent gap up on heavy volume. This was followed by continued strong upside in the shares. This could be considered a "breakaway gap".

Gaps, fills, and islands are useful parts of technical analysis. Significant gaps up and down are often important signposts in a stock's chart. Whether a gap is filled in quickly or at all is significant as well. Especially on the Daily Charts, keep an eye peeled for gaps and the subsequent action in the stock.










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