How to Use Score History to Find the Best Entries and Exits
Why Score History Matters
On WSOB (Wall Street Option Bets), a single score tells you where a stock stands today. But score history tells you where it's been — and that's where the real edge is.
By comparing a stock's current score against its historical trend, you can identify whether momentum is building, fading, or setting up for a reversal.
The Three Key Patterns
1. Riding the Trend
When a stock's score has been steadily climbing from negative territory into strong positive territory (+6 or higher), it signals sustained momentum.
Example: A stock moves from -2 → +3 → +6 → +8 over four weeks. Each score increase confirms the trend is strengthening. This is a momentum play — stay long until the score starts rolling over.
2. Waiting for a Pullback
A stock scoring +8 or higher that dips to +4 or +5 — while the longer-term trend remains bullish — often presents a pullback entry opportunity.
Example: A stock peaked at +9, pulled back to +5 over a few days, but the weekly regime remains bullish. This temporary dip can be an ideal re-entry point.
3. Spotting Reversals
When a stock's score drops from strong positive to near zero or crosses into negative territory, it signals a potential trend change.
Example: A stock goes from +7 → +3 → -1. The momentum has clearly shifted. This is a signal to exit long positions or consider a short setup.
How to Read the Score History Chart
On each stock's detail page, the Score History chart plots daily scores over time. Here's what to look for:
- Upward slope — Momentum is building. Look for entries on minor dips.
- Flat at extremes — Strong trend in place. Hold your position.
- Rolling over from highs — Momentum fading. Tighten stops or take profits.
- Crossing zero — Regime change. Re-evaluate your thesis.
Combining Scores with Regime Analysis
Score history is most powerful when paired with regime analysis:
- Bullish regime + rising score = High-conviction long entry
- Bullish regime + falling score = Potential pullback — wait or reduce size
- Bearish regime + falling score = High-conviction short or avoid
- Range regime = Be cautious — wait for a breakout signal
Key Takeaways
- Don't just look at today's score — look at the trend over days and weeks
- Use pullbacks within a strong trend as entry opportunities
- Watch for scores rolling over from extremes as exit signals
- Combine score history with regime data for higher conviction trades
Ready to see score history in action? Check the WSOB Leaderboard to find top-scoring stocks, then dive into any stock's detail page to analyze its score trend.
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