finwistic
Stan Weinstein

Stan Weinstein

Stan Weinstein is the creator of stage analysis, a framework that classifies stocks into four cyclical stages based on price and volume behavior relative to the 30-week moving average, introduced in his 1988 book Secrets for Profiting in Bull and Bear Markets. As publisher of the Professional Tape Reader newsletter from 1965 to 2004, Weinstein built a reputation for correctly calling every major bull and bear market cycle over four decades — a track record that made him one of the most respected market timers in history. His system is organized around a single principle: buy stocks in stage 2 uptrends, avoid or short stocks in stage 3 distribution and stage 4 downtrends, and use the 30-week moving average as the primary tool for determining stage transitions. The framework applies with equal clarity to individual stocks, sectors, and major indexes, making it one of the most versatile and complete technical systems ever developed. Weinstein's insistence on simplicity — reading pure price-and-volume action rather than chasing news, macro narratives, or earnings stories — continues to shape how generations of traders approach systematic, rules-based market analysis.

Don't label this market — focus on individual stocks, not the bull/bear debate

4m 15s

Weinstein opens by cutting through the noise of the bull-versus-bear debate that consumes financial media. He acknowledges issuing a bear market sell signal in January 2022, yet refuses to get caught up in what label the current environment deserves. His argument is direct: in any mixed market, roughly half the stocks are acting bullishly and half bearishly, and obsessing over the macro label causes traders to miss the only question that matters — which half is this stock in? Trading success comes from reading individual stock charts, not forecasting the overall market direction.

"Don't get hung up in semantics."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Leading sectors and the Russell breakout: where real strength is concentrated

2m 45s

With the broader market in a neutral state, Weinstein identifies where genuine leadership is showing up: biotechnology has been almost universally strong, semiconductors and AI-related names have been outstanding, and the Russell 2000 has finally broken above its 200-day moving average after a prolonged period below it. The Russell breakout is particularly meaningful — when small-cap stocks join the large-cap leaders, the rally becomes broader and more credible as a sustained move rather than a narrow tech-driven spike. This broadening of stage 2 action across sectors is what Weinstein looks for to confirm a genuine change in market character.

Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Stage analysis: finding stage 1-to-stage 2 transitions for favorable risk/reward

4m 44s

Weinstein explains why stage analysis creates the most favorable risk/reward environment for active traders. When a stock has been thoroughly destroyed during a stage 4 decline and has since built a base, the emergence into stage 2 with moving averages beginning to turn up creates an entry where the natural stop is close and the potential upside is large. Buying into stage 3 or stage 4 reverses this equation entirely: the easy move has already been made and downside risk far outweighs remaining upside. The system's entire edge comes from entering early in the cycle, before the crowd has recognized the opportunity.

Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Discipline and simplicity: why consistent execution beats complex analysis

5m 16s

Drawing on four decades of navigating every major market cycle, Weinstein argues that trader failure almost never comes from a bad system — it comes from overriding a good system when it becomes uncomfortable. His rules are deliberately simple: regardless of how good the fundamentals look, if a stock is in stage 3 or stage 4, stay away. If the moving averages are declining and price is below them, there is nothing to debate. He reflects on how his track record of catching every major bull and bear market since the 1970s came not from brilliant forecasting but from following a consistent, non-negotiable process through every uncomfortable moment.

Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Reading live charts: what a true A+ stage 2 breakout looks like

8m 54s

In a live walkthrough of his Global Trend Alert newsletter recommendations, Weinstein reviews both successful positions and trades that did not work — narrating exactly what he sees and why each chart passes or fails his standards. He explains how the 50-day and 200-day moving averages define the structural backbone of any stage 2 setup, how the slope of those averages indicates stage health, and what distinguishes a genuinely high-quality base from a merely acceptable one. A chart that otherwise looks like a stage 2 setup but has nearby overhead supply — prior resistance from previous highs — gets downgraded: buyers will need to work through that supply before the move can fully materialize.

"It's not an A-plus chart because you do have supply."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

The new norm: adapting exit rules to today's high-volatility market

6m 16s

Weinstein explains a fundamental change he has made to his exit rules to account for the dramatically higher volatility of modern markets. In earlier decades, his primary exit trigger was a close below the 150-day or 200-day moving average. Today, with stocks capable of dropping 20–30% in days rather than weeks, waiting for those slower signals means absorbing losses that are difficult to recover from. His updated rule: when a stock closes below the 50-day moving average, he exits immediately, without debate. He frames this not as pessimism but as adaptation — the mechanics of stage analysis remain intact, but the specific thresholds have been recalibrated to match the reality of how fast modern markets can move.

"I'm totally disciplined. I never argue with my system."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Breakaway gaps and unfilled gaps: the most bullish signals in a stage transition

6m 37s

Weinstein walks through a series of charts to explain how gaps function as signals of institutional conviction. When a stock gaps up as it transitions from stage 1 to stage 2, confirmed by a move above its long-term moving averages, that breakaway gap is one of the strongest buy signals available. Even more powerful: when a subsequent pullback fails to fill that gap, it demonstrates that real demand stepped in and held price above that level. He notes that while roughly 90% of gaps eventually get filled, the 10–15% that do not — including a gap from 1962 on the Dow Jones that has never been filled — carry exceptional predictive power. News-driven gaps that fill quickly signal the opposite: the move lacked institutional backing.

"The 10 or 15% that don't get covered — that's a very powerful signal."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Exhaustion gaps: reading late-stage gaps in extended stocks

4m 22s

Weinstein continues the gap analysis, showing how the same gap pattern that signals a strong stage 2 entry becomes a warning when it appears in an extended stock. Using the Nvidia chart, he identifies how a third or fourth gap — appearing late in a significant move, far above the moving averages — shifts the probability from continuation to exhaustion. When that late gap is followed by a terrible close on heavy volume, the warning is clear. He explains that he trimmed Nvidia positions for clients on exactly this analysis, separating the short-term tactical view from the long-term thesis: Nvidia remains a strong company, but the technical evidence argued for reducing exposure after the exhaustion pattern appeared.

"That to me is an exhaustion gap. It's late in the move."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

The A+ setup checklist: group strength, no overhead supply, and volume on the breakout

4m 48s

Asked how to pick the best stocks from the many transitioning out of stage 1, Weinstein explains his forest-to-trees approach. The first filter is the overall market environment. The second is group strength: a great chart in a weak sector is worth less than a good chart in a leading group, so identify the leaders first. Third, check for minimal nearby overhead supply — prior price highs create resistance that absorbs buying and stalls moves. Finally, require volume confirmation on the actual breakout: without institutional participation showing up as a notable volume spike, the breakout lacks the force to sustain. All four boxes need to be checked for a setup to earn A+ status.

"Plus it's got volume coming in which shows that people are excited to do buying."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Short-selling and the 4B- signal: spotting stage 3 tops and stage 4 breakdowns

9m 11s

Weinstein walks through a series of stocks on his sell list, demonstrating the recurring patterns that signal stage 3 and stage 4 breakdowns: double tops followed by 50-day MA breaks, systematic series of lower peaks indicating distribution, and head-and-shoulders patterns that breach both the 150-day and 200-day moving averages. Each break of the 50-day MA is a warning — individually survivable but collectively diagnostic. He closes by introducing his 4B- rating: a stage 4 stock that has been thoroughly destroyed, built at least a small base, reclaimed the 50-day MA, and has room to run with no nearby overhead supply. For short sellers, the 4B- is the signal to cover; for aggressive early-entry traders, it marks the first point where a tentative long becomes defensible.

"Each one is a small warning — a warning heart attack."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)

Final advice: don't try to be perfect — be disciplined and trust your system

1m 54s

Asked what advice he would give his younger self, Weinstein distills five decades of trading into three principles. First: don't try to be perfect. Early in his career, expecting every trade to work exactly as planned created a psychological drag. Accepting that losses are part of any system — and focusing on how you handle them rather than how to eliminate them — was transformative. Second: be disciplined. Follow your rules without real-time renegotiation. Third: don't equivocate. Trust your instincts and your system, and don't overthink every decision. These three habits, he says, are what separate traders who compound over decades from those who are perpetually searching for a better system.

"Don't try to be perfect."
Stan Weinstein — Stage Analysis Masterclass (TraderLion)