Friday, October 17, 2008

A good end to the week

The market was very choppy today. I found it hard to keep profits and sold several stocks at break-even. I did manage to make some money on a couple of trades.


NIHD was a decent trade, but I didn't hold to my target which was met near 1pm. You'll noticed that momentum shifted downward right after my target was met. I made 1.02R but I could have made an additional 3R if I had held until it hit my target.

AGU was another winner, but again, I sold too soon. I could have held a little longer and made an additional 3R. I pulled 3.54R out of it.

I got out of AMED right on time and made 1.09R.

All told I made 4.69R on the day.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Better

I got out early. Things were chopping around way too much. I managed a decent trade that was more luck than a decent setup.

This half hour trade made me 3.12R -- not great, but decent for today.

My other trade was on FDG. It refused to go down yesterday so I bought it when things were looking good at the beginning of the day. I sold it as things soured and lost .54R.

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

How did I do that?

I somehow managed to pick the only two stocks in the market that didn't go down today.
I assumed the market was in a downtrend so I shorted AMT when it bounced off the 20 period moving average (green line and arrow). It had a pretty good run down to 29.50 but then bounced up with the market just after 2:00pm. I trailed my stop on the 50 period moving average and stopped out about even.
FDG was an emotional buy as evidenced by my entry point. Dumb. It was a losing trade until it headed down, but for some reason it bounced back up near the close. I had placed my stop on the 20 period moving average later in the day to avoid a loss in this stock. I thought it might head down with the rest of the market (and the rest of coal stocks) but it jolted higher.

I'll live to fight another day. I did make 7 bucks today, so I guess I shouldn't complain. I'm sure there were quite a few people that lost their shirt today.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Down today

I took two trades today and neither went my way.
TRMA could have been a good trade if I had set my stop a little further away. It went just a few pennies past my stop and then ended up with a pretty good drop for the rest of the day. Could have been a 5R+ winner. Instead I lost 1R on it.

MWV looked like a nice continuation of yesterday's gains with a consolidation pullback. It tanked with the rest of the market for a 1.11R loss.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Late to the party

I knew this would happen. After getting burned several time last week thinking that we were going to bounce, I got all conservative today. I didn't trust this bounce and even though it held throughout the day I played it with little risk. I got paid back with little gain--a measly .11R. There were several opportunities for 10R gains today, but I was too scared to jump in. That'll learn me.

My best trade today was LLL for a 2.38R gain.
I sold with about 10 minutes left in the day--just before the final huge push up where it met its target. Oh well. 2.38R.

AOC was probably the only stock that didn't make money today--that's because I bought it. It quickly deflated and left me with a 1.11R loss.

I bought IMCL because I thought it would break out of a consolidation. It didn't. I lost 1.11R on that one too.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Zweig Screen Down 43.74%

My beloved Zweig Stock Screen that takes the 5 highest relative strength (26 week) stocks is now down 43.74%. Since I began tracking the screen I have hardly ever seen it underwater and have NEVER seen it down this month.

Last year I blindly followed the screen and made a nice 40%. My schizophrenic trading this year has been a blessing in disguise. Although I abandoned my bread and butter screens and was regretting it for most of the year, this last few months has proven that blindly following screens doesn't always work.

Prudent Speculator & Stock Superstars Report

Occasionally I enjoy comparing my performance to The Prudent Speculator which is a newsletter service that is highly rated by Hulbert Financial Digest--a well-respected stock newsletter rating news source. For a newsletter service, The Prudent Speculator has had a fantastic run averaging over 20% return for the past 20 years.

This year hasn't gone so well as you can see in the box to left. The pain of this market crash has been wide spread and affected nearly everyone--including funds and services that usually perform quite well.

Don't feel bad if your portfolio is down 30 to 50%. Nearly everybody's is.

Hopefully, we'll be presented with an amazing buying opportunity in the coming years. I think it's much more easy to make money when the market is going up and I look forward to a time when things turn around.

I still believe that the market has a remarkable ability to heal itself and absorb all manner of disasters. My foundations have been shaken a bit, and I have become hesitant to assume that I can make a living trading stocks. However, until they tell little guys like me that we can no longer trade, I still see opportunity out there.

I'm looking forward to the opening bell on Monday.


I also follow the performance of the Stock Superstars Report, a stock newsletter service provided by the folks at the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII). I have a great deal of respect for AAII, and I learned a great deal when I subscribed to the Stock Superstars Report. The newsletter introduced me to stock screening and helped me to create market beating returns.

YTD they are down 40.4%!! That means to get back to break-even (for the year) they'll have to make 67%!! Whoa!!

Friday, October 10, 2008

Week in Review 10-10-2008

I'm glad its over.

From the Kirk Report:

For the week, the S&P 500 crashed -18.20%, Dow -18.15%, the Nasdaq -15.30%, and the Russell 2000 -15.65%.

"Crashed" is the appropriate term here. Holy moly.

Despite the devastation out there this week, I managed to "only" lose 2.75% of my portfolio. I lost 4.5R for the week, but I was trading smaller positions sizes as things continued to go south. Today I continued my string of losses with stupid emotional trades that I made based on rumors and emotion. I traded MOS as the market headed higher and then lost it all (and more) as the roller coaster headed back down. I broke all of my trading rules again (I didn't have a good entry point and I hadn't even calculated a stop when I entered). Just dumb.

I need to learn to be much more patient during times like these. I let my plan get sidetracked by indicators, news, and emotions.

Is it over yet??

I''ll have to admit that this week got me a little worried. I'm starting to see folks that I deeply respect and who are market geniuses wonder if things are so broken that they can't be fixed. That scares me. I've always been impressed with the market's ability to absorb bad news, but it doesn't seem to be doing that lately. Every single technical indicator is SCREAMING that we should be seeing an enormous pulse to the upside, but it just hasn't happened.


I got into the markets in 2003 thinking that we'd never again see the kind of detestation that we witnessed from 2000 through 2002. The market had learned its lesson about "bubbles" and "irrational exuberance". In many ways things seem much worse than they did then.
I kept expecting to see the big bounce this entire week. It never came and I got chewed up for my incorrect assumptions. It's going to take some time to convince me that I can pull money out of the market once again. Maybe this is an incredible opportunity, but with every passing day I get a little more worried that my dreams of trading full time might be extinguished by a market that no longer works the way it is supposed to.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Dumb

I didn't trade my plan at all today. I made the assumption that we would have a snap-back rally based on news and comments on blogs. I opened two positions right after the open thinking the only place they could go was up. One hour later I was out of both of them for a 2R loss on the day.

There were a million opportunities to go short later in the day, but yesterday's see-saw action frightened me out of making any trades. I was pretty amazed when I looked things over after the close. Holy cow. I picked the right time to be a day trader. The market is down more than double what I am and I've had a really sucky year. Yikes.

No matter what happens tomorrow, I'm committed to my style of trading. No more shooting from the hip because I'm afraid of missing out on something big.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

What the flip?

I dipped my toe in this morning a got it chewed off in short order. Fortunately, I had the discipline to quit when things quit making sense (have they made sense for the past 6 months?).

Every time I glanced at my computer the market was up 100 or down 100 points. I hope this kind of stuff doesn't continue, because I'm not very good at trading it.

For the day I lost .30R

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

My biases messed me up today

Today could have been a pretty good day if I had stuck to the plan. I took 4 trades all of which could have made money had I managed them correctly. Instead I let my bias about the market being too oversold control my trading. It hurt me in the end, but fortunately I lost only .84R for the day. Let's take a look at my mistakes:


I made money on TIF, but I got out too soon. I was too worried about the market turning around like it did yesterday. I wanted to protect my profits and I moved up my stop too soon. Could have made 3.66R.
I had my stop set too tight on SRE. After I made 1R I set my stop at break even. I stopped out and the stock went on to my target. I could have made 8.25R.

XRAY just didn't go my way. It never got up to +1R and hovered around break-even before losing .80R.

I missed a decent trade on this one (1st pattern in blue). I instead bought at the 20EMA bounce and quickly got killed stopping out with a 1.11R loss. This was a pretty dumb trade that I made because I thought the market would end positively today.

Monday, October 6, 2008

No Trades Today

I had a crazy day and the few moments I was able to spend alone with the market spooked me into staying away.

We finally have a nice looking "capitulation candle" that may indicate that going long (at least in the short term) might be an option again.
Nearly every indicator out there is showing that we are ridiculously oversold and due for some sort of bounce.


Glenn Beck was telling his listeners today that he is posting a newsletter on how to can fruits and vegetables so you won't starve during the coming apocalypse. Even Jim Cramer is getting into the mix. I started trading in 2003 so I really wasn't paying attention during the last decline. I'm guessing this kind of panic was going on then too.


Friday, October 3, 2008

Week In Review

According to the Kirk Report, here are the numbers for the week:

The S&P 500 declined -9.38%, Dow -7.34%, the Nasdaq -10.81%, and the Russell 2000 -12.12%. That's pretty nasty.

For the year the S&P 500 sits at -25.14%, the DOW -22.16% and the NASDAQ -26.58%.

I did pretty well this week despite the carnage. Amazingly, I made most of my money on long positions (thank you Cambell's Soup).

For the week I was up 7.25R.

Finally, for the first time since June, my portfolio is doing better than the indexes and the stock screens I follow. I still have a ways to go before I get to break even (I'm still down 16.63%--which includes the IRAs that I manage), but the last month of trading has been very encouraging as I've gained confidence in a new style of trading that has done well during an extremely difficult market.

If I had risked 1% of my capital on every trade starting in September I would be at break even (YTD) by now. As I gain confidence in my system (and my ability to trade it), I should see percentage returns that are closer to my "R" values.

How I Traded Today

What a wacky market this is. We get the decision that everybody wants and has been anxiously waiting for and thing go down the toilet fast. I made two trades today. Fortunately I managed my trades adequately even though I had dubious reasons for taking them.

I bought FDX on a channel breakout after the opening gap. I really didn't have a high probability setup, but I thought that FDX would mimic the general market and head up more. It was up 2R until the announcement was made and then it fell like just about every other stock in the market. I protected some of the gains and made off with 1.2R for the day.

Short Sellers are Heros

I got this in my e-mail from Investment U yesterday:

Short Sellers and Speculators Are Heroes,
Not Villains

by Dr. Mark Skousen, Advisory Panelist


Dear Investment U Reader,

I'm expecting a lot of nasty e-mails on this column, but the truth needs to be told. Short-term traders, especially short sellers, are often blamed erroneously for manipulating stock prices, forcing them down far below their real value, and for creating crashes and general chaos on Wall Street.

In fact, short sellers have been identified as so vile by SEC Chairman Christopher Cox that he has banned short selling for some 980 publicly traded companies. Chairman Cox and other critics of the market blame short sellers for several grievances:

1. Short sellers destabilize prices in a shaky market, and in a panic can make matters worse, causing a crash.

2. Short sellers artificially engage in "bear raids," where traders gang up on an illiquid - or thinly held - publicly traded company and push the price way down below their intrinsic value. After the stock plunges, traders cover their shorts and buy up good companies at bargain prices.

By temporarily banning short sales, Chairman Cox hopes to prevent the stock market from declining further. (So far he has been unsuccessful.)

So who's right, the short-selling proponents, or Chairman Cox? The best way to determine the truth is to look at what short selling is, and the evidence on what it does.

What Exactly is Short Selling?

Short selling is a way for investors and speculators to bet on falling prices, and for long-term investors to protect their investment portfolio during a bear market.


Most investors profit from stocks by buying a stock and then selling it when the price goes up. Short sellers do the opposite. They sell a stock first and then buy it back when the price goes down.

They accomplish this by borrowing the stock first and then selling it. To close their trade they purchase the shares, hopefully at a discount. When they buy the stock back, they return the borrowed stock to the owner and pocket the profit from the difference in price. Short sales must take place in a "margin account" because the sellers are using borrowed money.

"Naked" short selling is more controversial. It's defined as a short sale by brokers/dealers who sell a stock short without borrowing it first. The SEC recently banned this practice as well.

Investors can also sell short a stock that they own. This is the least controversial technique. It's often used at the end of the calendar year to lock in profits in a stock that has gone up in price.

But with the potential positive and negative aspects of short selling, what do the facts from the scientific community show?

Adam Reed, a finance professor at University of North Carolina, and Arturo Bris, a finance professor at Yale, have done extensive studies on short selling. He has come to the following conclusions.

On bear raids:

  • "In recent years, when academic researchers have looked for bear raids - even in those areas in which investors suspected that they existed - they haven't found them." They couldn't even find evidence of bear raids on 19 beleaguered financial stocks. They conclude that short sellers reacted to downward momentum, rather than caused it. "Typically, short sellers trade in response to past negative news," Professor Bris said, "rather than inducing current stock price drops."
Note: While bear raids are unlikely in mid to large companies because of their size, I do think that short sellers can artificially manipulate small-cap and penny stocks. I've seen it too many times!

On short selling causing greater volatility:
  • Professor Reed found just the opposite, that "stocks without short selling not infrequently trade at prices that deviate widely from their true value."
Three Little-Known Benefits of Short Selling

Academic studies also show three major advantages of using short selling:

  • First, they counter the "irrational exuberance" that company officials and bullish promoters parade about their stocks, and encourage a more sensible valuation of a company's worth.

  • Second, short selling is a legitimate way to hedge your position. It is not simply a strategy to profit from falling prices. Major institutions and conservative investors often use short selling to lock in a position for a period of time, and protect themselves from downside risk.

  • Third, short sellers and short-term traders provide extra liquidity and thus reduce bid-asked spreads. It is short-term speculators that allow long-term investors to sell when they want to.
From a practical point of view, while short selling of individual stocks is temporarily prohibited, investors can still play the down side of the market by buying short exchange-traded funds (ETFs), such as SHORT S&P500 PROSHARES (AMEX: SH).

Professor Bris concludes with this word of caution: "The ban on short selling may prolong the crisis in the sense that it will now take the markets longer to adjust to the true values of financial companies."

Short sellers and speculators are in fact helping us make the markets more efficient and more profitable for investors. In today's market environment we can use as many of these heroes as we can get.

Let's hope Chairman Cox comes to his senses and reverses his ban on short selling soon.

Good trading, AEIOU,

Mark

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Should have done better



I had a .57R day on one trade. I could have done much better if I had avoided over-thinking a few stocks on my watchlist. I had too much of "it can't go any lower" mentality today and it cost me. Here are 3 trades I was considering taking. All were down over 5% and I thought that it would be expecting too much for them to go lower than that. I was wrong.

The stock I did trade had no real setup whatsoever. My thought was that as the market rolled over, NOC would follow suit and end up at the lows of the day. I'm not sure what convinced me of this. I was up 2R at one point, but gave back most of it by the day's end. Not very smart.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Month In Review September 2008

Total R for the month 14.08
Win percentage 40.68%
Total trades 59
# of days I traded 14
Average # of trades per day 4.21
Average "R" per trading day 1.01
Expectancy for the month .30

All in all a pretty decent month. I'd like to bump up the number of trades to 100, but it is difficult when I trade only part of the time.

As I've said before, I'll need about 5R each month to be able to be financially free, so I'm happy with this month's results.

One that worked and one that didn't

This first example is a trade that worked for me today. Unfortunately, I let my fear and emotions get the best of me and risked less than half a percent of my portfolio on this trade. The stock was liquid enough, but my plan of buying more than 4,000 shares caused my heart to flutter when I saw how much it would cost--nearly $200,000.

I've never put that much into one stock so I decided to go with a much lower number. The market is still pretty fragile, so I am hesitant to go full bore right now. I could have made a bundle, but I guess it's better to feel somewhat safe going into a trade.

I shorted PCLN after the "bear flag" broke out at noon. Things looked good as the stock dropped to $64. But then the whole market turned and started heading higher and PCLN went along with it. I feel OK about this trade. I lose on more trades than I win, so this one wasn't a big deal. The only thing that bothers me is that I lost more than 1R. I must have calculated my stop loss wrong or something.

All in all, this was a good day to trade. There was enough action in the market, and we didn't see huge gaps that made things difficult to trade. For the day I made 5.48R.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Another day of nothing

This market is just goofy. I didn't take any trades today. I saw a few candidates, but I thought the market would gap and consolidate for the whole day. I didn't expect things to move up as much as they did. Shows you what I know.

Today's action makes tomorrow's even harder to predict.

I'm happy to sit on a 14R gain for the month and make a new start in October.

Monday, September 29, 2008

A good day to be away

Yowza!! That was one ugly day. I had no idea that the bill wouldn't pass. I thought it was a done deal.

This could actually be a good thing. It's a much more natural way for the markets to get back to equilibrium. It will be a shocker for a while, but eventually things will come back around. They always do. If you go back and look at the tremendous hits the market took in 1987, 1998, 2001, 2002, they look like mere blips on the screen. Someday this will be a blip as well.

But today people feel that the end is near. That can be good for the markets too. We've gotten way too cocky since 2003 and arrogance creates the problems that we are seeing in the market today.

My dad called me today worried that I was getting my buttocks kicked and destroying my financial future. I assured him that all my money was currently out of the market and that I was doing just fine. He asked me if this was the end of the stock market as we know it. I asked him if he remembered the crash in 1987. He said, "You know, I really don't. It must not have affected me that much, because I don't remember it at all."

As devastating as that crash was in 1987 (a loss of 40% on the DOW--20% of that in ONE DAY), when you look at the chart you can see that things recovered to where they were before the crash in just two year's time. The markets have a remarkable ability to heal themselves and even though everybody is saying "This time is different!", I really think that this will end up being an amazing opportunity to buy some really beaten up stocks on the cheap.

So even though the headlines are screaming "BIGGEST ONE DAY LOSS IN HISTORY", they are referring to dollars lost--not percentage lost. If we were to duplicate that October day in 1987 the DOW would have had to lose over 2200 points today.

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Get ready for week that will make history

If this deal falls apart--watch out!

I'll be happily watching from the sidelines. I've considered taking my 14R gain for September and sitting on it until things are more clear. Things are far too messy right now to try and be too fancy.

Things at my job have become more complicated as well, so I just might have to sit this whole thing out anyway.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Worst YTD for the Martin Zweig Stock Screen so far

I went back and looked over AAII's data for the Zweig screen since 1998. This has been the worst year for the stock screen since AAII began tracking it. AAII tracks the stock screen on a monthly basis. Here's the breakdown:

From January through September:

1998 31%
1999 16.3%
2000 40.2%
2001 19.8%
2002 12.9%
2003 38.1%
2004 25.2%
2005 25.7%
2006 7.2%
2007 15.9%
2008 -10.5%

Friday, September 26, 2008

Week In Review 9-26-08

This was a topsy turvy week. I was very hard to grind out anything as the markets waited for the decision makers in Washington. I had a few good trades go bad as the market chopped about.

I made 5.42R for the week thanks to today's trade.

The Zweig RS 5 screen lost 5.5% this week. Zweig MACD lost 8.22%. Ouch.

Finally, I get a trade that works out the way I planned it. This trade came from a NR7 signal using Trade Ideas. I spotted it just as it was breaking out of the "bull flag" consolidation and I put a stop just below at 20.06. After leaving money on the table on several of my trades recently, I decided to place a limit order at 21.09 where I estimated that the "measured move" would end.

I went for a bike ride and returned to find the stock sold. I assumed that I had stopped out with a 1R loss but then I noticed that the limit order had triggered. The stock was on its way back down when I got home, so I was relieved to see that I had benefited by unemotionally trading my plan.

In the past I would have trailed my stops using the 20EMA (green line) as my threshold, so I probably would have sold at 20.70. Corey at Afraid to Trade (my mentor extraordinaire) challenged me to change the way I was setting my stops and determining my exits when I spoke to him last week. I owe him for the success of this trade.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Down another 1R

I shouldn't trade on days that I have obligations. I don't seem to take everything into account and I end up making hurried decisions. Today I took 3 trades and lost 1.10R total. Toward the end of the day I was actually up 1R but as the market rolled over I lost two thirds of the trade. Oh well.

It was pretty choppy out there today, so I guess I don't feel too bad.
LLL was a stock that I was watching throughout the day. Check out the wicks on those candles. Days like these are hard to trade.

Monday, September 22, 2008

The Stock Market for Beginners


Sometimes I can't believe the mistakes I make. This weekend I vowed to hold my positions to their target and avoid trailing stops. The two trades detailed here are obvious examples of how I broke that rule. I wanted too desperately to keep my profits and I placed my stop along the 20 EMA instead of shooting for my targets (blue arrows). For the day I lost 1.82R. Crud.


I was glad to see that the market didn't scream forward again today. I think this pull-back is healthy. I have no idea where we're headed, but it does seem like all the rules have changed. Crazy times.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Mamaliga

When I lived in Romania, I was introduced to the country's obsession with a simple dish called Mamaliga. I tried to like it, but to me it was bland and the texture made me gag.

My friend Gabi has created a YouTube video of how to make the dish. You can see it on his blog that is dedicated to all things Mamaliga. He cracks me up.

Oh the insanity--Week in Review 9-20-08

I'm still pretty ignorant of stock market history, but from what I read from people who know, this was one unprecedented week. I'll have to admit I was feeling a little odd on Thursday and Friday. It almost felt like the end of the market as I knew it. Everything seemed to be changing, and I became worried about my future as a trader.

Friday's opening gap made it nearly impossible for me to get into any trades with good probabilities. It seemed like every stock gapped up 3-6% and then flatlined the rest of the day. There was really no wiggle room for me to trade in. That's OK, because I took the day off and got some stuff done around the house.

It's crazy that the markets ended up pretty much where they were before the week began.

The down days were good for me as I made 11.22R for the week. I'm thinking anyone with some good sense could have made a LOT of money this week.

The Zweig RS 5 screen lost .20% this week while the MACD screen (with only on candidate) made over 9%.

Trader Mike has a good post about the spikes that a lot of stocks showed during Friday's frantic trading action. I noticed strange spikes on a lot of stocks yesterday and that's part of the reason I stayed out.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

It was me

If any of you were wondering what really caused the market's unexpected surge around 2:30 today--I sold all my long ETFs in my long-term portfolio. It always works that way.

Today I lost .23R on two trades. Again, I didn't trade my plan. I had my stops way too close and I got jumpy with every move. Here are the two trades I took today.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Stock Market Day Trading

Here are the two trades I took today.

Wow . . . Again

That was buttock ugly. I managed to squeeze out nearly 3R on two trades. I could have made a lot more but once again I had an appointment that kept me from managing my trades. Some day I'll be able to do this without interruption.

Charles Kirk has a very well written and thought out piece about our current situation and government interference.

I was way wrong when I decided to go long in my retirement portfolio. I haven't been able to pull the trigger and dump the losers.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

The Traveling Trader

I've seen a bit of the world, but this video that I ran across this summer inspired me.



Where is Matt Video

Does anybody out there have experience trading on the go? How do you keep things secure? Do businesses with WiFI hotspots get upset when you're streaming quotes over their bandwidth?

My goal is to start traveling with my family in the next 3 to 5 years. I'm planning to set up a "home base" in a country that is cheap to live in and friendly. I lived in Romania for two years so that seems to be a logical first base.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Wow


Despite this being the suckiest market day in quite some time, it was my best day trading so far. I managed an 8.77R gain. It could have been more, but both stocks spiked around 3:30pm and stopped me out before they continued downward. Oh well, I'll take what I can get.

Unfortunately my two highest "R" gainers for the month came on trades where I risked half of what I normally do. The first was the result of my fear of more losses, the second was today on AIV (chart above) where I only got a partial fill. I decided not to chase the stock and canceled the remaining order--crud.
I honestly thought that the market would capitulate at 3:30pm and come roaring back as the bargains were snatched up by the big players. I was pleased to get out of my trades quickly despite losing 2R in the process. Better safe than sorry.

I'm not sure where this leaves us. Is the selling finally over? I have no clue, but I think this day was healthy for the market. We didn't have any "rescuers" today, and the market was allowed to adjust on its own. It's about time.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

When I used to have hair


And bad eyesight. . .

Missed this opportunity



Here's a trade I should have taken on Friday. I'm learning that narrow 30 minute candles aren't confirmation enough for a high probability trade. BEXP showed a "bull flag" on the 5 minute chart at the same time it was painting a narrow 30 minute candle (around 11:30). If I had bought it when it broke out from the "flag" pattern and held until the end of the day, I could have had a 7R profit.

It could be nasty tomorrow

Daytrading makes news like this less scary:

US asset prices tumble
Wall Street Bankers Teeter
Lehman Heads Toward Brink
Wall Street Prepares

Tomorrow will be very interesting.

Maybe I won't have my regular Diet Mountain Dew for breakfast tomorrow.





Saturday, September 13, 2008

Week In Review 9-12-08

The week started off good for me and then I blew it. I got too cocky and started trading outside my plan. I ended up the week down .21R but it sure feels like I was down more. I could have had a very good week if it wasn't for knee-jerk trades that I shouldn't have taken.

For the month of September I'm down 2.55R.


The screens came to life this week with Zweig RS 5 making 2.43% and the Zweig MACD making 3.5% (on one stock -- COH).

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Another Bizarre Day --And a Decent Profit

I didn't think yesterday's gains would disappear quite this fast. My trading was a mess this morning and it was all my fault. I started with the right attitude, but I jumped in way too soon and bought 4 stocks that had nothing to do with my trading plan. I even bought DELL because I heard that the CEO (Dell) bought a bunch of stock. Apparently I have learned any lessons over the FIVE YEARS OF SIMILAR MISTAKES.

I stopped out of DELL quite quickly and went long on three others. What is my deal?!!

I stopped out of them rather quickly as well. I was down 4R and felt like a complete moron.

So I dusted myself off and decided to trade like I did in August. I waited for the kinds of setups that worked and found a couple of winners. NRG was my biggest R win. It was up 8R for a bit before recovering a bit for a 5.5R gain.Overall I made 3.53R today. It should have been a lot more, but I'll take it.

I thought when I started using real cash that I'd become more disciplined. That hasn't been the case. I find myself getting out of trades too quickly when they start going against me and obsessing about taking gains too quickly when I've made some money.

I've also tried too many "hot dog" trades where I have no real confirmation, but the temptation of making quick bucks overwhelms my logic and risk management. Hopefully today will boost my confidence a bit, and I'll apply the lessons I've learned--but probably not.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Another Nutty Day

I wasn't too thrilled about taking any positions today despite everyone being thrilled about the bailout and the subsequent market gap up of over 350 points on the DOW. I was pretty sure that things wouldn't hold up all day, and they didn't. I decided to take a few positions around 11am and a few of them made a few bucks and a few lost a few. My portfolio lost about a tenth of a percent overall.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Angry traders

My most recent post has garnered a LOT of e-mail and a few comments so far. I am surprised by the number of people who get upset at me for some of the decisions that I make about how I spend my money. My viewpoint is that it takes money to educate myself, and some of that money is going to be wasted on stuff that doesn't teach me anything (other than to avoid wasting my money like that again!!).

I've spent a lot of money on services, newsletters, trading plans, mentoring, screeners, etc., and with very few exceptions, I've learned from all of them. Trading is a discipline that's in constant flux and has billions of bits of information that are impossible for anyone to totally comprehend. That's what I enjoy about it. It's new every day and there is always something to learn.

You can't be a tightwad with your money if you want to learn how to trade. There is lots of information out there for free (including this blog), but you've got to pay for the deeper stuff that can only come from talking to people who can actually show you how to make money because they've done it.

Yeah, I made a dumb mistake buying this last bit of information. But I'm not flailing about like a chicken with my head cut off. I have the discipline to make money as a trader, and I've made a lot in the last few years.

This year has sucked, but I think I've grown more as a trader this year than the last 5 combined. I'm within a few months of actually fulfilling my goal of trading full time for a living, and I was nowhere near that just six months ago.

So be assured that I'm doing OK. I haven't gone insane, and I'm not a sucker, or "completely clueless" (most of the time). I wasted 70 bucks, but I'll be able to recover. Trading isn't easy, and I think that I'd be doing everybody a disservice if I avoided discussion about the boneheaded decisions I've made.

Saturday, September 6, 2008

A waste of money

I've been receiving daily e-mails from momentumstockpick.com for the last few years. They advertise "Powerful stock market resources and tools for day trading with our strategy. Discover momentum stocks in a snap and choose only the best every day."

I thought I'd give it a try--for $70 I could learn a few more things.

My loss is your gain. What I received was a link to a website that was basically about 4-5 pages of very basic information that is shared by every stock blog out there. The gist of the article encouraged looking at free news sites and buying cheap stocks that have news announcing new stuff. That's pretty much it. Revolutionary.


Friday, September 5, 2008

Well that just sucked

I traded like an idiot today. Down 4R. You name it, I did it--over-trade, revenge trade, breaking trading rules, not following the plan, entered the wrong order. Just stupid.

I rushed into things because I had an obligation so I wanted to get my positions established before I had to do anything else. That was my first mistake. So then I chose stocks that didn't fit with my system at all. I was buying right an left--anything that was moving down with the market.

Then the market started shifting upwards and it all came apart. I had a feeling that it might go that way after the sell-off yesterday.

I'm going to start posting my weekly and monthly "R" values instead of percentage up and down. It helps me in my analysis, and it should allow StockPunk readers to get a more "scalable" idea of how my performance has been.

My goal is 100R (or doubling my account) by next summer. I'm pretty confident I can do it if I avoid the mistakes that I made today.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Not too shabby

My first day trading real money with the new system. It's a lot harder risking real money, but I managed to gain 1R today trading 7 stocks. I was up over 2R for a bit but decided to hold on to my short positions because the market was trending pretty strongly. It didn't work out the way I planned but that's the way it goes sometimes.

I'm pleased as punch to be able to gain 1R on a day where the market had some pretty huge losses. I used to dread days like this. I would watch pensively as my positions got decimated and I would grudgingly pick up the pieces at the end of the day. Now, I can decide whether or not I want to participate in the action and I can take positions that follow the trend of the market.

I'm finding that on trend days like this, there are often too many stocks to monitor and it becomes more of a crapshoot. I missed CME even though it was on my watchlist. It ended up with a 5R gain. My biggest gain was 1.85R today.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Tomorrow is the day-- I'm day trading stocks online

I've got everything setup and I must say I'm impressed with TradeStation. It offers a lot more than my Scottrade Elite platform did. I spent most of the day learning the system and I plan to make my first trades tomorrow. Exciting.

We had another non-committal day today. I saw several good setups and I'm starting to think that meandering days are good for my system. I have trouble on true trend days. I don't have enough history to make a judgment one way or the other, but things will be clearer in the coming months.

I bought a 22" monitor over the weekend and I've become one of those "snobbish" multi-monitor traders. I'll have to admit, having more than one screen makes things much easier. I was wishing I had a couple more today.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Nutty Day


My money is still in cyberspace somewhere so I was unable to trade today. That was a good thing as I was completely surprised by the reversal that happened today. We got a indication that things were going south and that the trend would end at the moving average crossover. That probably where I would have closed out any longs that I had.

With the news that Gustav wimped out and the subsequent drop in oil prices, I thought this would be a strong positive trend day. Shows you what I know.