The stock closed at $182.83 on March 10, barely up 0.236%. That's not the story. The story is everything under the hood screaming different directions at once.
The Pivot Point Everyone Ignores
Demark pivot sits at $178.554. That's 2.3% below where we are now. Not some magic line but it matters because it's the only technical level showing genuine support structure in a chart that's otherwise a mess of conflicting signals.
The all-time low at three cents is ancient history. Today's range bounces between resistance at $180.29 and support at $174.35 on the same Demark system. Price is trapped between those two. The one-week performance of 4.37% looks solid until you realize the 10-day SMA at $183.99 is overhead.
I've seen this setup before. Price hugs a pivot, moving averages stack against it, oscillators split. Usually resolves fast. Problem is which direction.
Moving Averages Don't Lie
The EMA 25 at $184.65 flashes strong sell. SMA 10 at $183.99 says sell. EMA 10 at $183.09 shrugs neutral. When shorter-term averages can't even agree with each other, that's not indecision — that's a stock bleeding momentum without the drama of a crash.
Price action gets labeled bullish but I don't buy it. Bullish would be trading above those moving averages, not scraping along underneath them like a ceiling you can't break through. The gap between current price and EMA 25 is small but it's there. Every rally attempt since last week has failed at those levels.

Confidence sits at low. Signal score negative 9.1. The official call is neutral which in trading terms means "we have no idea either." That's honest at least. When FCS API data shows low confidence on a neutral signal, it's basically waving a yellow flag.
Oscillator Split Tells You What's Coming
Stochastic K% at 28.84 screams sell. ATR at 6.45 says buy. These two never agree when things are calm. ATR measures volatility — it's high right now which some systems interpret as bullish. I don't. High ATR in a sideways stock means big moves are coming, not that they'll be up.
Stochastic under 30 means oversold technically. Textbook says bounce coming. Real trading says oversold can stay oversold for weeks if the trend behind it is broken. And those moving averages suggest the trend isn't your friend here.
Camarilla pivots give you a tighter range. R1 at $178.36, S1 at $177.28, pivot at $177.82. That's a 60-cent window. If price drops to test Camarilla support, it's also testing Demark pivot at the same time. That cluster around $177-178 becomes the make-or-break zone.
What the Data Means Right Now
The opening price today was $182.40. We're 43 cents higher. In percentage terms that's nothing. The fact that every technical system throws a different opinion at this stock tells you institutions are split too. They're not dumping it but they're not loading up either.
I pulled this data through stock API documentation on FCS API and the oscillator conflict is the wildest I've seen in weeks. When Stochastic and ATR point opposite directions with this much conviction, someone's about to be very wrong.
The all-time low reminds you this stock wasn't always expensive. Three cents. That's pre-split, pre-everything. Means nothing for today's trade but it's a humbling number when you're staring at $182 wondering if it holds.
The Trade I'm Not Taking
I'm not touching this until it picks a side. If it breaks above $184 and flips that EMA 25 to support, maybe. If it drops through $178 and the Demark pivot fails, I'd short it to $174. But right here? No edge. The data from FCS API gives me the numbers but not the conviction. And I don't trade without conviction.
You want more setups like this, the stock market analysis section has other trades where the signals actually agree. You want to pull this yourself, API pricing plans start cheap enough that you can test before committing real size.
I'm sitting out. If this thing makes a clean move either direction I'll consider it then. For now it's a coin flip and I don't bet on coins.




