- Overselling refers to selling of a volatile good or service in excess of actual capacity. In the travel industry, the term overbooking is used instead. In telecommunications, sometimes the term oversubscription is preferred. ...
- To agree to sell more of something than one can supply; To be too eager in attempting to sell something; To praise something to excess
- (oversold) A stock or commodity market condition where there has been significant trading driving prices down to lower levels, levels which seem overextended or excessive on a short-term basis
- (Overselling) A lot of hosting companies market themselves as not overselling their services. This refers to the number of customers they put on each server. ...
- Overselling refers to the ability to sell more bandwidth and disk space than you have.
- (Oversold) a currency pair is oversold when its price falls much more quickly than usual, declining too far in response to net selling. Once oversold, the pair is then expected to make a contrarian move, meaning its price is expected to rise.
- (Oversold) A technical condition that occurs when prices are considered too low and ripe for a rally. Oversold conditions can be classified by analyzing the chart pattern or with indicators such as the Stochastic Oscillator and Relative Strength Index (RSI). ...
- (Oversold) A term used to describe a market or a stock that has declined so rapidly and has generated such excessively bearish sentiment that a near-term rally to the upside is highly likely.
- (Oversold) A technical opinion that the market price has declined too steeply and too fast in relation to underlying fundamental factors; rank and file traders who were bearish and short have turned bullish.
- (Oversold) The reverse of overbought. A single security or a market which, it is believed, has declined to an unreasonable level.
- is oversold market; prices went down too low and quick; price rise is expected
- (OVERSOLD) A market which has fallen too far and too fast under excessive selling pressure and is expected to move back to a higher, more neutral level.
- (Oversold (Undervalued)) A point during the course of trading where a certain issue/market/team etc. has drastically decreased in price or perceived value of the crowd. ...
- (Oversold) A condition in which the price of an underlying asset has fallen sharply, and to a level below which its true value resides. This condition is usually a result of market overreaction or panic selling. ...
- (Oversold) A level of price coinciding with extreme levels of a momentum oscillator below the centre line.
- (Oversold) A market circumstance in which the movement of a currency pair price has fallen at least 150 percent more violently than normal, overreacting to net selling activity. ...
- (Oversold) A stock, a market sector, or an entire market may be described as oversold if it drops suddenly and dramatically in price, despite the fact that the country's economic outlook remains positive. ...
- (Oversold) A term used in technical analysis as an indicator that a share price is too low and so may rise to meet the underlying trend. See Overbought.
- (Oversold) An opinion that a security (or the overall market) is undervalued due to recent vigorous selling activity and that an upward correction is likely.
- (Oversold) Describes an asset/market in which prices are perceived to have fallen lower than is justified by fundamental or technical analysis.
- (Oversold) Recently extended or exceeded trend parameters on the downside
- (Oversold) That means the market has had a sharp decline. Rank and file traders who were bearish and short have turned bullish.
- (Oversold) They're a terrible company but we're their broker.
- (Oversold) Used in the context of general equities. Technically too low in price, and hence a technical correction is expected. Antithesis of overbought.
- (Oversold) a market condition after an abrupt recession. In this situation a corrective price rise is possible.