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.
I'm beginning to think that AOBites Good thing I'm in from 4 or so. I'm giving it one more day, or not even that if it drops below its 50.
I just posted almost the same thing over st the *** boards. I posted that I will sell if it drops below $5. If it goes more than a few points below the 50 line, there's no telling where it'll go.
I just bought the dang thing on Friday and now look at it. You're right BJ...AOBites.
AOB could recover, but there's no point in fooling around with a stock as volatile as this. There are over 8000 other stocks to trade. I can make it up elsewhere.
Well, I'm just glad I bought most of it when it was down at 3.60. Made some $$, but not as much as I could have.
Onward
I just got through figuring it up. I made 15 buys and sells on AOB....Today's action put me at a loss. I traded it way too much. Another lesson learned.
That's more than I have. My limit never hit on RWC. I guess I'm chicken too.
I was chastising myself out of frustration. You're not chicken. Just a disciplined Vulcan with your limit.
Often, I eschew the "limit" discipline and average in when a stock goes all over the place. With RWC, the first batch hit my limit, but I can usually be more liberal with my smaller 2nd batch if I like what I see once it begins to move. I chose not to add on Wednesday (actually did consider it), then it bounced back up like a rocket the day after.
I really wish I'd bought some TIII, but I'm sure there are more out there getting ready to rock.
I really admire Poorman's patience, so I'm trying learn that from him. It can be hard skill to master.
Man I'd love to hear more about this from ya Webs. Get specific if you have time dude. Patience is something we all need to be reading and focusing on. What is patience in trading? Where does it fit in? Certainly it is patience relative to our own trading rules that we set for ourselves, but there's an enormous amount that can be written by way of example of the things that happen to us that clouds that patience, that even confuses us about our own thoughts of whether we ARE being patient. The mind plays funny tricks on us humans.
And a Vulcan's perspective would be a wise perspective. I don't know Poorman's perspective, but I'm sure it's worth reading too
I really admire Poorman's patience, so I'm trying learn that from him. It can be hard skill to master.
Poorman is more of an investor than trader. He let's stocks go down sometimes to 20-30% and a trader wouldn't allow that. So sometimes his patience pays off when the stock comes back but when it doesn't, it doesnt.
Comment