I have 22 consecutive profitable trades of 15% or better. How is this possible? Every day there are hundreds of stocks setting new highs, no matter what happens in the overall market. Many of these stocks are still at very reasonable valuations. Afraid of buying stocks at their highs? Think of it this way: a new high is really a future floor for companies with solid financial underpinnings. Quantitative momentum modeling makes it easy to identify stocks that can continue this upward momentum trend. Why does this happen? It's really very simple..ask me about what investors and cows have in common. I am $$$ MR. MARKET $$$. I AM HUGE!!! Bring me your finest meats and cheeses. You can join in on the fun. Register for free and you'll be able to post messages on this forum and also receive emails when $$$ MR. MARKET $$$ makes his own trades. ($$$MR. MARKET$$$ is a proprietary investor and does not provide individual financial advice. The stocks mentioned on this forum do not represent individual buy or sell recommendations and should not be viewed as such. Individual investors should consider speaking with a professional investment adviser before making any investment decisions.)
If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
As I stated I think it is way oversold and mostly because of the subprime lending situation. I liked it yesterday at $5.32 because I felt that it had found a bottom. The R/R is pretty good for what I am looking for. I set a stop at $4.95, which is .37 below my entry, and am looking for it to go back over $6 and most likely $7. That would make it an R/R of just over 6 to 1. The chart doesn't show much technically to the upside but what I really liked was that it went over $7 the last week and then sold off. I'm willing to risk the .37 loss on 3000 shares for the possible gains of $1.68. That's 6 to 1 in my book. But of course it has to do it first but the most I will lose is $1110.00 to gain $5040.00. I liked the way it finished the day yesterday but we'll see what it does today. No play no pay.
Flawless logic...good luck.
=============================
I am HUGE! Bring me your finest meats and cheeses.
Hopefully Ernie. I made a mistake on the r/r math. It should be 4.5 to 1 on the r/r instead of 6 to 1. Sorry my mistake in the calculation this morning.
Hopefully Ernie. I made a mistake on the r/r math. It should be 4.5 to 1 on the r/r instead of 6 to 1. Sorry my mistake in the calculation this morning.
Well, almost flawless then BTW, why the stop at 4.95? Other people seem to have that as entry point...
Regards,
Karel
My Investopedia portfolio
(You need to have a (free) Investopedia or Facebook login, sorry!)
Well, almost flawless then BTW, why the stop at 4.95? Other people seem to have that as entry point...
Regards,
Karel
Karel,
I wish I had acted on this stock when Ernie first mentioned it. I did look at it's chart and saw the big volume coming in at around 4.90 / 5 levels and liked it's oversold look to provide a bounce. It started it's bounce before I could get in and I missed it. That bounce went to over 7. When it fell and fell farther I thought there was a good chance it would recoup 7 or more on the real oversold equity in the price. That's basically why I made the play yesterday for that value difference in what I thought was oversold and that it had found a bottom yesterday at 5.32 level. I was looking for anything over 6/7 but thought 7 was realistis for the r/r. I placed the stop at 4.95 for two reasons. The first was that 7% is my stop loss max. and that was right at 4.95. The second was that if you look at the daily chart and at the 4.75 to 5 level on 3/12 to 3/19 or so there was heavy volume coming into the stock and I felt that the top of that range was a good support level for the stop. I would have felt comfortable with the stop at 4.75 even though it was more than my 7% limit but I stuck with the rule and it doesn't matter right anymore now because it opened at 5.01 and I got stopped out in no time at all. If you were to look at the 15 minute chart right now you would see a big gap down and the candle would be a rather long candle down. At the bottom of that big gap is a key place to enter for a nice long spike back up. I forget the name of the chart pattern but the percentages are good right now for a big spike up. I would jump back in if I see or feel that happening. But that is why I set the stop where I did and why I made the play in the first place. That was a quick $1100.
It's getting beat down now...I will be jumping back in soon.
I'm going to be watching it closely from here. I thought just maybe that there would be a spike back up at the bottom of that gap but no cigar. It's not real common chart pattern but happens often enough if you know to look for it after those big gaps down.
All those wise words came too late for me. I went in almost at the open at 4.95, and am now in the black again
OK, who was smarter?
Regards,
Karel
You still have the money so you must be smarter Karel. It was a good entry but after this morning and looking at the chart right now I'm a little anxious. Since I started writing this it has gone up almost .12. Good luck Karel.
Oh...subprime is just the start...Next comes Alt-A.
You know who I think is a good short over the next two years?...WFC...They are at 34.68 now...You just wait...they bury these loans so far down in their financials that nobody ever sees them until it all comes out...Save this post and let me know where they stand on March 26, 2009.
I may just short this one with real money and let you know what happens.
Why do you expect the fiasco to be limited to subprime loans? Can't any loans, even ones rated AAA double-plus good go into default if the borrower goes broke or just decides to quit making payments?
Saw an article today about how Harley-Davidson (HOG) is getting hit by loan defaults. I wanna' be the pencil-necked accountant that goes to tell the bikers they're late with their payments. Pay up, you deadbeats!
I felt that was a setup today by some hedge funds. Very volitaile stock right now and too dangerous.
this is all over the news right now, so everyone and their mother wants to play the subprime sector and make a quick buck. that could explain at least some of the volatility.
Frankly, anyone who buys a 1 down ......
SssSssSss
But I guess there are plenty of people who thing fuzzy counts are just plain dumb and not worth taking into consideration.
Fuzzy roadmap: Look for this 1 down to complete soon (to frustrate recent stopouts), then the 2 up (fer the nimble), 3 down (for the clever), 4 up (fer the patient), 5 down (fer the profit-takers) .... over the next 12 to 20 trading days.
Comment