Friday, January 08, 2010

Triggers

A couple of triggers and swing trades for today:

RIG 92 from last night's newsletter worked so far for a point -- look how it is riding up the 20 EMA -- perfect for trailing stops (good job BartinBC)



FSYS from last night's newsletter worked for 2 points -- buy close to the base, take profits away from the base as stock gets extended away from EMA.




CAT we wrote last night that 60 spot was iffy and that we were long the name already. It didn't set up on a daytrade basis but we like the chart on daily. We came into today swing long CAT PCU QCOM (all posted real time on our twitter acct)
and added DTG CVX and a new stock for us, MICC (hat tip @ldrogen)



What is amazing about this "easy market" is that all you have to do is go through your watch-list, buy them all in anticipation, and watch them break-out the next day. It takes an extremely benign market for this to work -- and we'll do it as long as it works.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Buying Support

One of the most gratifying things about trading off support and resistance is that you can sometimes get a 2 for 1 deal in that you trade long on a break-out through resistance and then buy the pull-back to the same spot which now has turned to support.

Here are two trades from this morning:

As you can see GOOG had a small break-out spot at 600 from December. We put that in the newsletter last night (and posted this morning on our Twitter/StockTwit Account)
that we were looking to buy 600.



The stock came within 62 cents of the number (which is amazing considering it's a 600 dollar giant) with the added bonus of S1. Very nice trading opportunity.




A few days ago we had a buy spot alert on APA at 106.5.




Very nice bounce at the number and again with S1 help. One of the things we repeat ad nauseum to our readers is to always trade more aggressively when several ducks line up in a row -- a reverse on a bounce is great but for a day-trade having a stock come into the number and hit S1 at the same time is just a nice bonus.






These were both day-trades and we are out of the positions. We think that GOOG has a date with the 50 SMA and that ultimately APA will also fail support. However nothing goes down straight and there often are great daytrade opportunities long on down days (within bull trends). We won't get into any swing trade positions on support until the pull-back shows a bit more teeth.

HMIN another one we posted in Twitter yesterday near 38 -- we had this on a breakout and it worked as a daytrade yesterday on a bounce on the same level. Very good continuation today.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Bread and Butter Daytrade Set-Up

AONE has a daily spot at 23.5 -- stock spiked up away from base, came close to resistance, and reversed. As you know, we never buy on top of an extended spike so we waited for a pull-back/good entry. We found one on the test of P/20 EMA (on 5 min chart). We bought the bounce on that test with average 22.6 entry.




Our initial stop was 22.4 (low of that test).



Stock rides up on the 20 EMA but needs to break above that R1 wall at 22.8 with a volume spike. The longer it takes the higher the chance of failure as the EMA flattens out.




EMA was tested but candle closed above -- that low became the new stop around 22.6.



Stop keeps moving up with the EMA -- now a risk free trade since stop is over the 22.6 entry. Stock pops over 22.8 and takes out R1.



Stock takes out R1 but reverses and with that we take off half the position for just over a dime as we are thinking it will fail.





AONE is a momo stock and this kind of action just doesn't make us feel bullish. We exited the rest of the position on yet another test of the EMA. If stock reverses this afternoon over 22.8/22.9 with huge volume burst we'd probably try again.



We made nothing basically in this trade but it's a great example of how we day-trade, day in, day out. Our whole trading strategy is based on the confluence of daily spots and intraday set-ups. This set-up was a very typical one that we do almost on a daily basis (it usually works, really). We've shown a lot of winning trades over the last little while and it only seemed fair to discuss a no-go.

Tuesday, January 05, 2010

QCOM

On a day with tech weak the stock had a nice move as investors are buying the stock on news that its Snapdragon processor is being used in Google's new cellphone the Nexus One.

We like the base on the daily chart and are looking to initiate a position trade in the stock for our longer term account.

Before and After

All the following were posted under our twitter account yesterday before the break-outs (and for BHI this morning before 42 break-out):


http://twitter.com/HCPG


Join us on Stocktwits. and chart.ly





BHI trigger was 42 (41.5 start over 50 SMA)





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XLF trend-line break continuation:





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BAC break-out:





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TC break-out:



When shorts refuse to die

A common occurence in bull markets are stocks with text-book short set-ups that just refuse to die. They hover over support but don't roll over and then one day they catch a bid and rip off the heads of the shorts.

Here is a chart we posted a few days ago:

HIG was our go-to stock this week if the market sold off and it broke 23. As you can see it didn't break 23 and instead reversed and completely obliterated the descending triangle pattern. The stock was a long on the trend-line break/50 SMA ( we weren't involved).



Moral of the story is when a stock sets up short but refuses to roll over, be careful and don't anticipate -- wait for confirmation.

Triggers

What is amazing about this market is when one sector rests (like tech today) then others run (like commodities) and even though the market is flat there are multitudes of break-outs. We expect some rest coming up for the commodities coming up soon.

This is the percentage gain from our triggers from last night's newsletter -- the gains are moves from our alert price. 10 gains, 1 flat, 1 loss.

Running in a flat market

Our favorite moves come when our stocks rip and the market is flat. Anyone can make money in a rally but it takes good picks to run in a flat market. We didn't hold overnight any of today's triggers but these two are our favorite for those of you holding:

Perfect -- excellent volume on BHI. Alert was for 41.5 (and secondary at 42)



Best thing for FWLT now is to base under trend-line and not to return to 31 base. Alert was for 31 with initial target 32.5

Lots of triggers

From our newsletter last night we had triggers in ACI ADS APA APC BHI CNX DOW EMN FWLT NOV.

We love commodity moves as they tend to go together -- making it easier to trade aggressively.













Monday, January 04, 2010

TC


Picked some up for long-term account. Like the chart and the fundies.

Thursday, December 31, 2009

Happy New Year/End of Decade

It was a good year to be a trader in that we all learned something, be it noobs or veterans. This is our second crash since we started trading in the late 90s and the trench war experience has made us into stronger more seasoned traders. The positive of being a trader this decade is that it makes one have faith in one's abilities -- if we survived this, we can survive anything.

Short-term emotions will always reign supreme, but long term logic always wins out which is the reason we are technical based for short-term decisions and fundamental based for long-term decisions.

For purely psychological reasons (and not technical) we went flat in our day-trading and swing-trading accounts today with only nominal positions (LIWA and AVL.TSX) in our long-term fundamental based account.

Like experienced sailors going out to fish, we're confident and look forward to starting 2010 and yet will always be respectful of the power of the market.

Happy New Year to all of you -- have fun and stay safe, and we'll see you next week.

HCPG/BTG

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Base and break GS

As our readers know this week the #1 stock on our lists has been GS. We wrote in our newsletter last night, "No clean spot -- you just have to watch for the set-up, most likely a base and break near 165.5."

We were off by 30 cents as GS set up very well below yesterday's high of 165.2. The day-trade entry was anywhere from 165 to 165.2 as the volume surged in before 11 AM (we were in swing from 164.1 from yesterday but our day-trade add was at 10:57 AM at 165.08 av). Stop at this point on the day-trade add was 164.8 or max 164.6, that is 30 to 40 cent risk.




We wrote real-time about the basing under 165.2:


As our readers know base and break is our bread and butter day-trade strategy -- in which one can put on a large position with a relatively tight stop (on liquid stocks anyway). It's the most successful day-trade strategy that we have traded and one that we always rely on for large day-trade positions.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Market Talk

We love this commodity pull-back -- a few more days like this and we'll have a plethora of decent support trade candidates.

This is the type of trade we're looking for going forward -- CNX 47 support reversal. Note how many balls line up for this trade - trend line/50 SMA/ 20 SMA. Also hopefully we will have multiple stocks in the same sector in the newsletter -- another great factor which often lines up as the sector hits support at the same time (increasing chance of support bounce).

As we've written ad nauseum in our newsletters in the last 4 years -- the more ducks line up in a set-up, the higher the chance of it working.

A day in the life of a day-trader

As many of you know we have been watching GS for a while -- patiently waiting for the trend-line to break. GS has been acting terrible of late with poor relative action. Today it started to firm up and act better, showing good relative strength. Here is our trade (all tweeted in real-time):


At point (a) we have the base and break under the number (usually a clean number but in the case of GS was around 165.5 - 166). Note the volume spike. We were long in size at 164.60 av. The stock pulled back on light volume and then rallied straight up to R1, which is a great day-trader exit --we took off 20% at point (b). So far so good for the stock but the problem was that the S&P started failing and hit low of day, not good as GS can't run by itself. We sold most of our position at point (c) and held some at break-even stop (164.6), which was hit shortly after (d). We still made some money on it due to our size but we of course would have preferred a successful break-out -- if that had been the case we would have sold a good portion by end of day but kept at least 20% for swing.

Over the years we have normally day-traded 80% and swing-traded 20%. We've been increasing the swing position lately and plan to do so for as long as the market volatility remains low and the bull uptrend remains intact.









Monday, December 28, 2009

Continuation versus New positions

The strength in tech has been impressive and this chart is something to behold. If you've been swing long for a while are are enjoying gains every day -- great, take some off and be on the look-out for potential reversal. But it's our job to come up with new picks everyday for the newsletter and it's getting more and more difficult with each up day. A pull-back would freshen the air and set-up many more charts (tonight we had one of our thinnest newsletters this year with only a handful of new picks).

A January reversal would fit the bill.




NOC



This defense stock has been on our radar for a while -- looks great.

DayTrading/SwingTrading

Within our system the only real difference between day-trading and swing-trading is time. Our entry strategies are the same (be it buy on support or buy on a break-out) and our exits are similar (an extended move away from the base/ a run to resistance).

We've shown before how we day-trade support -- buy on an extended move away from the intraday base on a bounce to daily support and sell into intraday resistance (often the 20 EMA on the 5 min chart).

Here is a perfect parallel swing-trade on a daily chart in which you would have done something very similar but instead of taking 30 minutes it would have taken a couple of weeks.

BHI 38 was a newsletter support buy pick -- the exit was today on the 50 SMA failure. We got in at the right time near 38 but sold much too early. We still have to work on that patience thing....

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Easy Tape


The current market is one of the "easy tape". Whatever one puts on (as long as its long) goes up - technicals work like magic and stocks do exactly what they're supposed to. We all look like geniuses. Don't get complacent -- this type of tape never lasts.

Don't be the happy little pig lulled and fattened up by the "kind" farmer (mother market) before your throat is slit one morning and you're on someone's plate served as sausage.

We were telling ourselves this morning how we're hitting the ball out of the park with every trade, like we can do no wrong, and how buying every dip is working like magic. Right after we said that there was a moment of silence -- we've been here many times before in our 13 years of trading and often it comes right before a change -- when suddenly stuff doesn't work, and stocks don't obey one's playbook. Don't be complacent. The gig is on full-play right now -- enjoy it, play it hard, but be on alert for the possibility of a change into a less benign trading environment.

And on that cautionary note, happy holidays to our readers, and we'll see you here next week.

HCPG

Holiday Trading

Holiday trading can sometimes be so predictable as traders run third-tier names (i.e. AIG) and small-cap Momentum names.

This is the reason we had AONE 20.5 in our newsletter all week on break-out watch:

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

This is what a benign market looks like

ALL our triggers from this week -- as you can see, great continuation:


AAPL 197 on trend-line break


AKS 21.2 on trend-line break


APC 63.2 on trend-line break


BCSI 28 was our best trade this week:



CNQ 70 was channel break-out





GLD 105 was a support buy (we tweeted it our buy live at 105.4 yesterday)




GNK was a support buy with alert at 20.7 (didn't quite make it) on the 200 SMA


HGSI 29.5 worked well


Our only short, HIG 23, which didn't work:



RS 45 on resistance break




SPW 55.8 on trend-line break





XLE 57.2 long on trend-line break