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Real Money authors - Helene Meisler

Helene Meisler

Helene Meisler is a world-renowned market technician and equity trader. As a self-identified swing trader, she specializes in utilizing technical analysis to capture short-to-medium term stock gains over a period of several days to several weeks. 

As the first-ever technical analyst for Goldman Sachs in 1989, Meisler has been one of the pioneers in the financial industry for over 40 years. She has gained notoriety for her use of hand-drawn charts and ability to find profitable opportunities other financial experts miss. 

In addition to her work at TheStreet where she contributes daily to Real Money and Top Stocks, and is an Action Alerts PLUS team member, Meisler frequently appears as a commentator on various financial news networks, including CNBC and Bloomberg TV. She also speaks regularly at industry conferences and events.

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Recent Articles By The Author

Is the Market's Tank Half Full, or Half Empty?

Let's look at the chart of gas, what growth stocks tell us, the 'M' pattern, and why you might want to top off your tank.

Suddenly, a Fear of Heights on Wall Street

Sentiment anecdotally shifted on Wednesday. Let's take a look.

Micro Moves in the Market

Let's check on an infinitesimal shift in the indicators we saw Tuesday.

A Market 'Too Far, Too Fast'? You Betcha

For the first time in over a month we had the S&P 500 up and breadth didn't play along. Let's look at resistance -- and a chart you should be watching.

Almost Every Single Chart Has Resistance Overhead

Unless we get breadth red for some meaningful number of days, we won't get back to even a moderate oversold condition. We simply remain overbought.

A Win-Win for the Bulls and the Bears

Let's look at breadth on the S&P 500, the put/call ratio, the bonds, the overbought market, and more.

An Unconfirmed Bull Sighting Was Reported on Nasdaq

Here's why you should keep buckled up and focused on the indicators, despite reports in popular financial media.

This Market Could Get Bumpy, So Sit Tight

Apparently Wall Street didn't get the memo about a lazy August. Let's see why volatility could make investors sweat a little bit, look at new lows and check on weakening momentum.

Will the Bears Pass or Flunk a Retest?

Let's check all the boxes on market sentiment, breadth, positive divergences and index levels.

When Did We Start Making Live Play-by-Play Calls on Wall Street?

How did we start calling bear markets -- and recessions, for that matter -- before we could really know? (And here's why I'm sticking to what the indicators and statistics tell me.)

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