Friday, March 12, 2010

Position Update

We added CAT NUE POT swings today, and sold 1/2 of the MOS swing into the gap. We're also looking to buy back the RIMM we sold yesterday into a pull-back. We constantly trade around our core positions.

We currently hold SPY short, and are still long GMCR RIMM QCOM MOS COG plus new positions CAT NUE POT today.

Update: We are getting slightly nervous with crude move down and have added to the SPY short, and taken a few profits on our positions to raise cash. Going into more conservative mode.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Position Update

We sold our DVN into the gap up this morning for a quick 2 profit. We sold a bit more RIMM into today's ramp but still have some left for the 82 target (we will add it back on pullback). We still have our GMCR and are holding for 100+. We didn't make any adjustments to COG MOS QCOM nor the SPY short hedge. The position we were hurting in, MOS, now gapping afterhours thanks to POT guidance and we'll probably take some off tomorrow but keep partial for a more sustained Ag-Chem run.

Scaling in and out Tier Strategy by T3

Great video on how to tier in and out of a position by our partners at T3. This video is just one in the extensive library of trading education videos found on T3 Live. Here's Marc Sperling explaining how to tier into a trade:












The homework

We wanted to write a post not on how we trade but rather focus on the process of how we prepare for the next trading day.

Simply put we do four types of trades: we buy support, we short resistance, we buy break-outs through resistance, we short break-downs through support. We trade off daily charts but always wait for intraday charts to set-up. This means we're less active than most traders but at same time most likely have higher win rates since we wait for more balls to line up before pulling the trigger (this possibly yields the same PnL but psychologically more satisfying to win more of the time).

Every night we go through a master list of stocks that we call our usual suspects. These are a mix of stocks we have traded for over a decade and new momentum stocks that catch our attention. We go through each list via sectors; our favorites are momentum tech, coal, oil and gas, steel and iron, gold, Ag-Chem, and financials. For various reasons we don't often trade biotech (too risky), utilities (too slow), REITS (do this through IYR, individual REITS often don't trade well), health care (too slow), pharma (too slow), etc. There is almost always enough opportunity within our favorite sectors and we don't like to cast the net too wide. We look for our favorite patterns and place alerts accordingly. Usually a theme becomes clear: a) break-outs are setting up and we're looking to go long next day buying breakouts on a trend day up; b) break-outs have been failing and internals weakening and we look to short resistance/break-downs c) market is strong but overbought and we're looking for a pull-back to buy support, etc. Preparing well for different situations for the trading day is already half the battle.


From our master list we usually find around 10-15 stocks that interest us around key numbers and form a small watch list for the next day. Small watch-list is key to how we trade – we don't like missing moves that we've been watching for days and having only a small number of stocks helps us stay on top of all our stocks. If we like a spot we watch it for as long as it takes to break-out – the most successful trades we have are often the stocks we've had on our list the longest. Why? Because we've watched them every day and know their behavior, price and volume action. When they break-out it is very rare for us to miss the move because we recognize the different price-action/volume that often precedes break-outs.

Another important aspect of our nightly preparation is to spot tells for the next day. These “tells” are imperative to how we trade. For example if the market is pulling back and we want to buy support and AAPL is sitting on important support, we make note of that to watch it the next day. We're not going to buy support if a leader stock like AAPL is cratering through support. We also always have an eye on what is leading the market: sometimes it's tech (usually AAPL), often financials (GS a favorite), sometimes crude is leading, other times gold, etc. One has to constantly watch the tape and become aware of what is leading and trade accordingly.

Once the trading day begins and alerts start to trigger, whether we trade them or not, we drag them to another portfolio to track. If alerts are failing we step back, re-assess, and adjust our strategy. If alerts are working, we become more aggressive. We can't emphasize the importance of this -- you need to know what stocks are doing at critical areas. Is support crumbling or are buyers stepping in with both hands bidding up stocks on support?

During the trading day we also look to how market/leader stocks react to events. Are they buying bad economic data/crude inventories? Is a hot momentum stock selling off after good news?

Lots of factors to keep in one's head and it's imperative for us to stay sharp throughout the day. This is the reason we step back from the market or at least trade lightly if we are ill, have not slept well, going through family issues, etc.

We hope you enjoyed this write-up; we'll be looking to do more of these educational posts with our partners at T3.

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

Position Update

We are still long GMCR RIMM, added to short SPY at 114.91 and inititated swing long position in MOS.

Update: Covered SPY short from this morning at 114.4 and 114.3 for 50 and 60 cent profit but leaving our short from Friday and yesterday average 114.3 left intact.

Update: Added swing long positions in COG DVN QCOM to go along with our long positions in GMCR RIMM MOS and added more $SPY short 114.8.

Longs RIMM GMCR QCOM COG DVN MOS short SPY.

Monday, March 08, 2010

Meet Trader X

One of our favorite posts from our partners at T3


Meet Trader "X"

By: Evan Lazarus

I know and have worked with many traders around the world. Over the years, I met one individual who is by far, the best trader I have ever met. He is very consistent and makes an incredible amount of money as an active intraday trader. For the sake of anonymity, I will call him “Trader X.”

I still remember the day that I realized just how successful Trader X was at trading. Today I must admit that although I have met traders that make considerably more money, I still hold him in the highest regard as a trader and personal mentor, as he has never deviated from his path. I am lucky to know Trader X and have reaped many benefits from incorporating the lessons I have learned from him into my own trading over the years, so that now I play the part of mentor to many novice and even seasoned traders. I would like to share with you some of the lessons I have learned from him. Although he has never taught me formally (in a teacher/student capacity) as I do with others, these are lessons that I have acquired from observing him trade, that I continuously teach in our T3Live education classes.

1. Patience is Paramount
An important lesson learned from Trader X is that patience is everything. Profitable traders, like Trader X, wait for the perfect trade setup. 90% of all traders who do not consistently make money trade for the sake of trading, as I used to do. I used to look at the markets and ask myself "which way is market/stock going to go?" Now I look at the markets and say "Is there a low risk trading situation developing?" I have learned to be patient, and my profit factor has been consistent over time.

2. Never Follow the Herd as the Herd Consistently Gets Slaughtered
If you think about it, it makes perfect sense - the very best time to buy something is when everyone is convinced that the price is going to fall lower, and the very best time to sell something is when everyone is convinced the price is going to shoot to the moon. Trader X taught me the importance of trading against the crowd. The crowd is reacting to the market, and that is exactly why you must react to the crowd. This simple change in mindset can produce incredible profits if you are willing to look like a fool (in the eyes of others). Now, this is not code for counter-trend trading as a means to success, but rather a mentality I implore the same as when shopping for a car. When you go to a dealership or a car show, the cars all look beautiful and pristine. New car smell, nice paint job, shiny tires, but do you ever kick the tires or look under the hood? Is that beautiful car as healthy on the inside? Being a good technician means not getting caught up in the superficial.

3. Do One Thing, and Do It Well
If there is one simple thing that I have learned from my Trader X, the best trader I have ever known, it is this: to make money trading you only have to become an expert at one type of trade. There is no need to do ten things, or yet worse, ten things at once. Simply concentrate on one thing, and if you trade it well, you can become a very successful trader. Too many traders (especially the day traders) think they need to make multiple trades in a day, or to trade multiple stocks over the course of a day in order to make money. Chances are that the more you try to do, the less successful any of those trades will be--a “jack of all trades but a master of none.” As I tell all of my trading students, “it only takes one lemon to make lemonade.”

4. What’s YOUR Style?
How many times have you heard some expert say something like "technical analysis doesn't work" or "never trade on options expiration" or "scalping is impossible." One thing I have learned from my trading mentor (and from working with traders all over the world) is that the very best traders create their own trading style. This doesn't mean that you must reinvent the wheel to become a successful trader; it simply means that many successful traders have found their way to success by adapting trading strategies and making them their own. It is not important that you trade precisely as other successful traders do, but it is important that your style of trading makes sense to you, as this will ensure that you stick with it over the long haul.
Trader X has a completely unique trading strategy that he has crafted over time by exposing himself to many different ideas and many different traders. His system is unique because it is his, and it makes sense to him. This is important because it means that he is better able to maintain confidence through the drawdowns that inevitably occur.

5. Have An Extremely High Win Rate
There has been a lot written about win rates (what percentage of your trades are profitable), but what some traders do not seem to understand is that it is possible to have an exceptional win rate. 70%, 80%, even 90% is possible. This I have learned from Trader X- he has an incredibly high win rate, and I do too now because I have learned so much from him.

Trader X is continually improving as a trader. He is constantly figuring out ways to get better at what he does. He uses every loss as an educational experience - that is how he sees them. Every loss is a lesson that the market has handed him. I would not say that he embraces losing trades, but he certainly does learn from them.

6. Everyone Has a Bad Streak
Even my Trader X will have the occasional unlucky streak with several losses in a row. This is not that interesting to me, but what interests me is how he deals with these streaks. He does not lose confidence and continues to take the next trade setup, as it occurs, and never questions his strategy. He knows that anyone can flip a coin and get "tails" 4 times in a row, and that is precisely how he views a non-winning streak. He knows that in the long run he will make up the lost money, and then some, so there is no need to panic. He knows with the utmost of confidence that he “is an earner.” Over the long run, he will continually just earn.

7. Being Wrong is Being Human
Trader X taught me that even the best traders, like him, are sometimes caught on the wrong side of the market. There is no need to panic when this happens, but once it does, a very good thing to do is to simply get out. Once you realize that your trade was not a good idea, there is no need to wait for your stop loss to get hit. When you know you have made the wrong move you can simply get out of the market and wait for the next trade. While I always preach about managing risk and evaluating stops, remember, you are a professional speculator and if it seems apparently clear that something with your trade is obviously wrong don’t be afraid to pull the plug early.

8. Let the Trades Come To You (Be Patient)
If there is one thing I have noticed about how Trader X trades (and this is not a unique characteristic, many of the very best traders I have ever traded with also have this characteristic) it is that he does not go looking for trades, he waits for them to jump out at him. This may seem like a weird way to trade, but it is precisely how he takes so many profitable trades. He waits and watches, and when the market gives him an opportunity to jump in to a good situation, he strikes. He never trades simply because the market is open, and he sometimes sits in front of his charts for hours without making a single trade.

I have learned from him that successful trading means being ready for the market to offer you "easy money" - or ideal trading setups. When these setups come along, I know it because I feel like I must take advantage of the opportunity the market is offering. Remember though, these setups come along infrequently and most of the time Trader X spends trading is NOT TRADING. This is very counter-intuitive to what most traders do and how they act. This is also the reason I believe that the trading profession is “hard.” Most traders feel compelled to trade the same way sports gamblers can’t watch a football game without having “action.” In the end, it’s a losers game.

9. Continue The Educational Journey
Trader X has such a high win rate, and is so good at picking high probability trade setups that some people may assume that he knows that he has the markets "figured out." Not so. He is constantly learning, he has many trading books, trading magazines and we are constantly talking about trading strategies. He learns from some of the best institutions and research centers around the world because he has a constant thirst for knowledge. The fact that he is open to new ideas and the fact that he is an exceptional trader is probably not a coincidence. I think that many successful traders are open to new ideas. This doesn't mean that successful traders switch trading strategies every month (Trader X has been trading the same trading strategy for years), it simply means that many successful traders are open to new ideas and new ways of profiting from the markets.

I hope that you have learned something from Trader X, I know I have.

The Plan

Our plan going forward is to stay swing long any break-out from a good base but short extended SPY (average short 114.3). If SPY keeps grinding up and breaks out of 115 we will be long additional breakouts in the coming days and thus the overall pain will be minimal. If we reverse tomorrow and we get stopped out of GMCR RIMM then our SPY short will hedge some of the lost profits.

Many good traders we know often put on similar hedges on an intraday basis -- something we don't usually do, but putting on an index hedge against your long swing momentum positions in an overbought market makes sense not only in protecting your gains but also psychologically aids one in staying with the plan and not getting shaken out easily.

Going to resistance from a very extended manner with light volume -- would be very surprising to not at least pause at 115 area.



Note the long base in contrast to the lack of base in SPY



Note long solid multi-month base in contrast to SPY




On a side note: it feels great catching a good breakout with many other traders on Stocktwits. Good stuff.

Position Update

Arrows represent our entry points. We are still long GMCR RIMM and short SPY. We sold rest of MTL CLNE swing today.


We sold more CLNE into today's ramp and will exit rest tomorrow before Wed earnings. (Update, sold rest of CLNE on commodity action)



We daytraded GMCR today and are out of that trade but are still long core swing from 86.12 from last Thursday. Stock has given us no reason to make complete exit.



We are out of MTL.



We bought RIMM on the base and break today under 72 (posted we were long on Twitter) and are out half already. We will swing this on good close.



We put on SPY short into Friday close over 114.2 and will keep this as hedge.

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Friday Triggers

Broad rally on Friday as the giddy bulls bid up everything in site. Break-outs worked well on Friday. Here are ALL the alerts that triggered from our list for Friday with arrows pointing to entry prices. We're swing long CLNE MTL GMCR and have a hedge short SPY.







Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Market Talk

It's been a long time since we started looking at the QQQQ as the leading index instead of the SPY but we like how the Nasdaq has regained leadership of the market.

Simply put: As long as we stay over the 50SMA we'll be active in buying pull-backs on strong stocks. Any move under the 50SMA and we'll have to reassess the strategy.



And if we don't pull-back then our favorite two break-out candidates are GMCR and RIMM.


Great interview

Fantastic straight-up talk by Charlie Munger (Vice-Chairman of Berkshire Hathaway) done in the midst of the crisis last year:



Also this video which cannot be embedded.

Monday, March 01, 2010

Market Talk

The higher up the market goes here the less you should chase price. We've had some good opportunity from our list today and in all cases were able to buy on good bases or on dips to the EMA.

We're back into a benign environment where the main strategy is buying intraday dips/bases on leader stocks near break-out levels.

We're long AAPL swing from Friday and are holding that along with positions in AMZN X ATPG CNX X GOOG which we will all swing on good closes.
---------------------------

Update next morning: We sold what was left of our swings into this gap-up this morning.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Big win for the bulls

The bulls kicked ass today on this reversal. The opportunity today was plentiful and we are kicking ourselves by not being more aggressive in our own picks.

Here are the support longs from our newsletter last night -- out of all of them only one closed lower. The arrows were the buy spots:








Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Review of some of the leader stocks

We wrote a while back that on next dip we'd focus more on tech and less on commodities. Well, we're here now and here is what we're watching:

We wrote last night to watch the 20/100 SMA on AAPL as a tell -- today it cratered through. Technically nothing to do here in this stock in no-mans-land and we'll be avoiding.



We'll be looking to buy reversals in CREE at 61 and 60.



We'll be looking to buy CMI reversal near 53



BRCM has decent support near 29.5 -- we'd buy a reversal on that area



CTXS slow but 43 support might be worth a trade.



We like FFIV on 52 support



GS was a buy on our newsletter from 158 to 160 target. Today stock rallied from 158 to 160 and then reversed sharply. Currently in no-man's land until bottom of bear flag just under 154.



We like RIMM 72 break-out a lot but don't have enough confidence to buy support in the stock. We'll leave alone until stock shows strength through 72.



VMW we have alert near 46.5 for a support buy on reversal.



This is the first time we can remember GOOG not responding to a market rally. Stock has flat-lined and we have no interest in the name right now.


Today's triggers

Decent day from newsletter as we got off a long and two shorts:

GS we wrote could be good for 2 points through 158 (160 resistance). Only regret is not shorting it through 160 failure.



WLT set up base and break 78 for daily short at 77.6



BUCY we had short at 62 which worked well.




We're flat now and going through charts -- coming up we'll post the charts of some of the leader stocks with possible support points.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Simple and yet so complex

Friday, February 19, 2010

Do not ask ....

To ask which is better -- fundamental or technical analysis -- will only take you down a path of confusion. Why? Because it takes away the focus from what really makes a trader consistently profitable.

Behind every profitable trader, technical or fundamental, is a great tape reader.

The best traders make money not by reading 10-ks or looking for head and shoulder patterns but from being able to sense fear and complacency, knowing when to push in an easy tape, when to anticipate and when to wait for confirmation, knowing how to find discrepancies and how to monetize them.

Often the difference between a consistently profitable trader and a churning one is the level of conviction in the plan: The best traders know when to push the envelope and when to wave the white flag. All this will help develop what years later will be called "natural instinct" -- the "edge".

Profitable traders constantly create new strategies and methodologies to stay ahead. For us this has been our "base and break" pattern strategy, or the idea of only pulling trigger when daily, AND intraday set-up/ or our constant comparative analysis against market "tells".


Every year mutual funds with deep pockets and vast research teams at their disposal underperform the market. Compare this against The Fly who we've watched for years maneuver admirably around the market riding the meaty parts of many a momentum stock. Or take the example of one of Stocktwits heavy-weights Jim Gobetz (aiki14) who has a great feel for the market and knows when to buy fear and sell into greed.

There are traders who recognize all the chart patterns, can quote verbatim from Gann studies and dream about Fibonacci retracements, who know dozens of technical indicators that we've never even heard of, and yet who can't trade their PnL past the poverty line. Compare this against the number of active traders with seven figure incomes who look at nothing else but price and volume. Charts are nothing but visualizations of price action. If we had super-human memory we wouldn't look at charts. But we don't, so every night we look through charts to remind ourselves of the previous days price-action.

On a personal note we've made our income from the market for over a decade now not because we can read charts well but because we're constantly looking for new things, for market tells, always trying to stay one step ahead of our competitors. We've proven ourselves over the four years we've posted on this blog; from our first call to start buying one day before the March 2008 low or on a more recent example of going long within minutes of the last bottom on February 05. There was no indicator nor technical pattern that told us to buy when we did -- it was developed instinct through years of watching price-action.


And to conclude we'd like to add a note about Stocktwits and new traders.
We wrote back in 2006 that the first step to becoming a professional trader is to find a type of system/trading method that you're drawn to -- one of the biggest mistakes of new traders is wandering into different methodologies simultaneously. For example they decide to give break-out trading a try and buy a new high, the stock reverses and they hold it, and then hold some more, until they convince themselves that it's a good value. Thus they started out as momentum traders (who couldn't care less about value) and ended as value traders (who couldn't care less about momentum). Mixing up such strategies is usually the beginning of the end.

As humans we define ourselves against others; good cannot exist without evil; the First World means nothing without the Third; and prey can only exist in the presence of predators. Traders can help define themselves and find what they're drawn to with the help of the Stocktwits community -- be it premium sellers, momentum traders, value traders, or currency traders. Stocktwits puts what before was abstract for a new trader into a convenient visual map. Do you want to live in the Bronx or Queens? Before a trader had to walk through communities for days in order to make sense of it all. Now it's simply all on the map.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Update

As we posted on our Twitter acct several times near the open "Instinct today , thus far, is to fade, not buy". Market was extended after trend day yesterday -- and it's very rare to get two trend days in a row in an already extended market.

To put it in a brutally simple manner -- for traders like ourselves there are two main strategies going into the day. Trend day strategy is buying break-outs, shorting break-downs; range-bound strategy is selling rallies, and buying support. Of course the hard part is figuring out early in the day which strategy to implement. We use our alerts as "tells" to help us decide what to do: for example CREE we had target long to 64. The stock set up base and break at 63.6 but only made it to 63.75 before reversing -- this was one tell out of many that made us think that we needed to use range-bound strategy of selling rips/buying dips instead of trend-day strategy of looking for break-outs/break-downs.



Copper very extended and reversed today -- needs to digest the big gains from bottom.



KOL reversed at 50 SMA



We're long a few RIMM in anticipation of 72 break-out. We trade around core positions, adding on dips, selling on rallies, while keeping core size. Quite likely we're early on this as it could test 68 support. Average right now is 69.8



We're long swing FFIV anticipating 54 break-out-- again, we'll trade around core position. We're long average 53.2 (posted on Twitter this morning). Update we sold it all 53.8-53.9 on this run -- we don't want it to break-out today and will buy on dip. If it breaks-out, we're not going to chase.



We would like to focus on tech more and less on commodities going into near future.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Trend-line breaks versus Channel Breaks

As much as we love the trend-line break trade, the best and least messy moves are straight up channel breaks.

Out of all our triggers (around 12 and counting) from last night the two strongest moves were WLT CMI channel breaks and not trend-line breaks.

Why is that? Because while you don't want a trade to be too crowded, you do want it to be on enough traders' screens for it to get momentum; trend-line breaks are just harder to spot for most traders. It's a fine balancing act between obvious but not crowded.

WLT 73 long alert



CMI 53 long alert

Another Example

AAPL great move today through trend-line but heavy resistance and congestion ahead.

Market Talk

Trend-line breaks worked well today but if you're looking for continuation you will have to be patient.

PCX found support on the 100 SMA, broke trend-line today for a nice move. But look at what's ahead in terms of resistance: 50 SMA, 20 SMA and lots of daily congestion. Nevertheless still bullish -- if you're a swing trader this is a hold with stop on today's lows.

Last Night's Triggers

Alerts that have triggered thus far into the trading day.


Arrow is entry point alert from last night's newsletter: