Support and resistance points are provided but no concrete action is given to taken a trade. If you spend a bit of time on stock charts or purchase some software you can do the same for free or at a much lower cost. Every market trades in a range, so its either going to go up or down and after it breaks through that range it will create another range. The idea is to issue trades with the highest probability of success and not provide support and resistance points. For example Home Depot is likely to test 183-185 before taking out 200. Use the pullback to open long positions.
Any novice Market Technician can issue resistance and support points, I did not lose any money other than what I paid for the reports, as I paper traded which is what I always do when testing a new service. If I had traded I would be far from happy.
I think Eric Hadik from Insiidetrack does a way better job at a much lower price.