We had one trigger on Friday  and one loss as CMG just triggered the stop before reversing and running for the  rest of the day.
 CMG was a bit of a  heartbreaker.  She had been on our radar for days but when it was time to  trigger, she had very little volume.  This was for us what we call a "conviction  trade" in that once she broke the base, even though volume was very light, we  "knew" she would go.  However, the volume was so light that the risk was quite  high in case she reversed.  How did we deal with the trade?   We took a small  position with fills around 83-83.1, with stop at ANY reversal back towards the  base (82.7-82.8).    If you think that a stock will go and the pattern is very  good but you think that the volume might come in after the actual break (which  unfortunately is relatively common) then maintain the same risk by lowering your  position size, but give it a shot.   Even a 1/3 or 1/4 position can give you  profits and more importantly, it will give you practice and experience in the  base and break pattern.
 Should you have entered at  83.5?  No -- the base was 82.8 and she was almost 1% away by that time.  The  only place to have bought the stock was on the breaking bar with fills around 83  (and thus 30 cent stop).   Remember, it's not the alert price that's  important, it's the break of the base UNDER the alert price that one has to buy  (unless the set-up actually is AT the alert price and not under).  The breaking  bar of the base is the most important part of our system.
 
There are multiple advantages  to buying the break of the base instead of waiting for the actual alert price,  an important one being that your stop is naturally lower.  Thus, even though the  stock fumbles around the number (which CMG, for example, did, and which  technically triggered our 0.3% stop) you still can stay in and wait for the  stock to consolidate without going negative (even though we always recommend  selling at least a partial into the break-out).   In good markets it often is  advisable (as we write in the How to Use our Services) to sell 1/3 at 1%, 1/3 at  2% and either sellf rest into 3%, end of day, or make it a partial swing  position by holding overnight (of course always know the earnings dates of your  stock).
 
Remember, you don't always have to buy 2000 +  shares of a stock to make money.    Let's say you bought as we did at 83 (point  A), with a stop on any reversal, but since the base was 82.7, that was the  number that you believed would be your first fill, even if you tried to  exit when the stock was at 82.9.  At this stage of your trading career, you are  only risking $200 per trade (something we recommend to new traders).  Thus, you  would have, for example 30-40 cent risk, which means you could buy around 600  shares in a gorgeous set-up but with miserable volume (if the volume had been  higher, you could assume a tighter stop with less slippage).    Thankfully she  doesn't reverse and you sell first 1/3 of your position at 83.7 ($140 profit  minus commission) at point B.  You sell this first 1/3 to lock in some profits;  we always sell partial into the break-out point if the stock is vertical by the  time she hits it (and she was) and if we are wary (and we were because of the  lack of volume).
Now you move your stop up to break-even and well above the base at 83 (point A)  for the remaining 2/3 of the position (400 shares).   The stock consolidates but  you weather the storm easily since she doesn't come back to your stop (and you  knew she would mess around the number since she's a NYSE stock with still  mediocre volume).  The stock breaks out into its second phase and you sell 1/3  at 85  ($400 profit minus commissions) at point C.  You move up your stop for  the last 1/3 of the position to 84.4 which represents the secondary base at  point D.   You can sell your last third at point E or hold overnight.  Let's say  you decided to liquidate the rest of the position because she still did not have  great volume and you don't feel comfortable holding overnight.  You sell your  last 200 shares at 86 for another $600 profit.     Therefore, you only bought  600 shares, with an initial risk of $200.   Your profit, even considering how  early you sold the first 1/3 of the position, was $1140 minus commissions:   that's just under 6 times your initial risk.Of course they don't always work out this well,  but if you love the pattern, and if you have conviction but the ducks just  haven't lined up (for example, missing volume) then take a shot, but a reduced  shot.   We're always telling you not to be trigger-happy, but sometimes it's  probably just as important to remind you not to be trigger-shy, especially on  "conviction trades". 
 
