Thursday, August 31, 2006

bought BTU

I bought some BTU today. It looks like it may have bottomed around 43
and was on it's way back up. As it found resistance at 44, I put in a
limit order for a small buy at 43.80, which filled this afternoon.

I'm not sure this is a good buy or not. I heard about it on a new chat
channel I'm on and the fundamentals look good and the chart looked
indeed like a bottom. FWIW, Cramer likes it, too. So we'll see.

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

riding the BTJ wave

I started seeing buzz for this stock last week. I bought some at open
on Thursday for $17. Friday I started hearing buzz about how it would
make the IBD100 for the first time since it just climbed to over $15 and
then it would gap up on Monday. At that time I decided to buy more and
it was at 19, so I waited and it dipped to 18.8 right before closing at
19.

It made #14 on the ibd100, but over the weekend it lost $1.60 in AH
trading. I'm still not sure why. I guess all the people that bought it
were looking to take profits. It gapped down to open mid-17s and closed
at 17.02, but I didn't sell because I didn't want to break my rule about
intraday trading.

So now what? My stop was supposed to be 17.29, but I removed it
yesterday so I wouldn't get shaken out. I was going to put in an order
t sell at open so I wouldn't get burned, but some folks at Investor's
Paradise said that the fundamentals were still good and that a pullback
was to be expected. I decided to see what Tuesday would bring.

Today it opened even lower at 16.78 and fell to 16.52 at one point. But
it stayed around 17 for most of the morning. At one point it started
running up and I put a buy order in for more at 17.40 while it was in
the .50s and .60s. It fell back through that and filled and then was in
the 17.20s. Dangit. I wondered if I had some kind of deathwish. Plus
I had broken my averaging down rule. Then, I did the smartest thing I
could do: go take a nap.

I came back later and it was high 17s. Later on it was in the 18s and
finished with a strong close for a day's high of 18.75! My acct was
down 2.5R at open to up 3.4R at close. Phew!

I have definitely not done things right here, and once again being lucky
might lead to bad habits, so I'll have to try and be conscious of those.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

My trading rules

I have amended some of these. The old rule is still there in red, the current one is 1a, 1b, etc.


1. Don't buy or sell anything during the day.
1a. Buy using limit orders after watching the opening range of the first 30mins or 1 hr after market open. Only buy if it's an up day for the market, and your stock is above the opening range.
2. Use a "mental stop" based on close prices. A tight physical stop will often
get shaken out during the day. A wider emergency stop might be a good
idea, though.
2a. Now when I buy, I put in a physical stop at 3 * ATR(14) below my buypoint.

3. My R is 1% (0.5% in a downtrend).
4. Don't go long during a downtrend.
5. Once you're up 10%, don't take a loss on that stock.
6. At 20% profit, sell half.
7. Stop shorting stuff until you can make money on longs.
8. NEVER AVERAGE DOWN
9. Only buy at a proper buypoint. Ones I will use are cup & handle, double bottom (with handle), 3 weeks tight, and bounce off the 50dma. All these should be accompanied with at least 50% greater than average volume on the breakout day.
10. Don't buy right before or after an earnings release.
11. If a stock does not break out the first day, sell half of it. You only want stocks that are going to go up immediately.
12. Only buy good-quality IBD stocks. They should be above the 50day, have a 50day above the 200day and trade more than 150k shares daily. And they should have a share price above $10.
13. Remember, there is always another stock.
14. Before you buy a stock, know where you want to get in, where you want to take profits, and where you will bail out.

climax tops will burn ya

My trading buddy bought SIM at 10.35 and watched it go up everyday all
last week. I thought it looked similar to ERS and IFO (now IFON) when
they topped and told him so. He had 20% profit on it last friday and
was wondering what to do. I suggested selling half. He declined.
Monday it went down for the first time in 8 days on what looked like a
lot of churning, and today the sellers swooped in. He got out at 10.79
and ended up with 4% profit instead of 20. It was brutal, 10% drop.

The lesson here is that if something's going straight up, you better be
careful with it. Don't be afraid to get out on the first sign of
weakness.

Also, I think you have to write yourself notes after something like this
happens to you. Or the next time you'll think, "ah, this is nothing.
Look how fast it's gone up 20%. It'll keep going." or "This might just
be a blip and then it will keep going and I don't want to miss it."

goodbye CTRN

Well, I got stopped out of CTRN today. I had left my stop at 29,
deciding that I would not ride that elevator down again. So I lost 7%,
which is not great, since I had too many shares. It ended up being a 2R
loss on one stock. Not cool, but it could have been worse.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

phew

I've done something extremely stupid, once again: buying on the way
down. This time it's with CTRN. It was down, and I bought it at 34,
then at 31, and put in an order for 28. For a while, it's been basing
at around 30, and I thought well, my 3rd buy won't fill and it will go
back up and the biggest problem I'll have was that I didn't buy enough
(greed). Store sales #s for the month and quarter would be released
this week and earnings in 2 weeks, so I was still thinking this was a
good time to buy.

Then it slipped and closed in the 29s for a couple of days,
then dipped in the 28s and Tuesday closed in the 27s (with my buy
filling on the way down. Hrm, be careful what you wish for.

Yesterday it closed in the 26s and I realized that there was no longer
anything holding this ride up. But do I get out now? Do I buy more
lower? I still feel this is a good company with good future growth
(they're going from regional to national), but that doesn't matter to
stock prices. What if this thing sinks to below 20 and languishes
there? Do I want my capital tied up in something like that, hoping that
maybe one day it will climb 50% to what I paid for it?

Ugh. Well, I have been somewhat saved. They released sales #s after
close yesterday and they were good. Sales are up, but SSSs were down
from the period last year. Ruh roh. It seems like lately the market
looks for any little thing to get out (and also there's a lot of shorts
in this float).

This morning I put in a sell stop for all my CTRN shares at 26. But it
went up to 27. Then 27.5, then 28, so I moved my stop to 27. Then it
went to high 28s, so I moved my stop up to 28. It closed at 29.59.
Phew! My stop is now at 28.50.

What I should have done was watch it go down and wait for it to rebound,
then start buying some. As it goes higher, buy more. This was totally
backward and I must not congratulate myself or be so happy about it. I
don't want my brain to think of this as a positive experience and be
tempted to do it again. You would think I would have learned my lesson
with NWRE.

NOTE TO SELF: NEVER, EVER, EVER, EVER AVERAGE DOWN!

deja vu

Well, I set my stop on SWN close alright--too close. I got stopped out
on a dip early on Aug 1, then the stock tookoff for $3. It's the age
old question of mental vs entered stops. If I want my stop for a
closing price to be 5% to cause me to exit, I should probably just enter
a stop for 10-15% as a safety net.