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Technical Indicators giving Sell Signals in stock market

April 20th, 2009

The technical indicators are definitely signaling a short term sell signal for any long positions, which is the reason why many stocks listed below have notes to sell half of long position.  There was not much change in the market on Friday but take a close look at the Telechart Daily chart of VIX—X, the Chicago Board of Options Volatility Index as well as the T2108.  The S&P Oscillator, put to call ratio and the Smart Money-Dumb Money index are also flashing danger signals to our long positions.

 

Even though various indicators may be signaling to reduce positions, they can stay at an extreme level for some time before eventually being “equalized” by the market’s tendency to balance extremes but it is wise to pay attention to these indicators throughout your investing and trading career.

 

Stocks in this situation of coming out of a deep low in early March can peak by making a slow rounded top as opposed to a sharp drop and that’s what many of these stocks appear to be doing. 

Stock Trading, Stock Trading techniques, stock market education, stock picks

What has been working the last 4 weeks in stocks

March 17th, 2009

March 16, 2009  Monday Evening

 

The Dow30 had a nice run caused by the Bernanke comments on 60 minutes last night, until the last two hours of the session.  It was probably a staged talking head ordered by the Commander in Chief himself and the very statement of “the end in sight” is like guessing an end game of a chess game after the first few moves are made.  For decades, the Federal Reserve was insulated from influence by other politicians but we saw Greenspan be President Clinton’s puppet a few times in the late 90’s but Bush seemed to leave them alone for most of his 2 terms.

 

The trading strategy that we have been taking the last 4 weeks on the banking stocks may seem aggressive to many of you but this is how you rack up serious profits.  Anytime you follow the chart of a single stock or sector as we have in the banking stocks JPM, USB, BAC, WFC, KEY, STI, and even GE with three round-trip trades starting with long, short, long and now short again is extremely profitable. 

 

Remember we came from intraday trades (aka scalping) most of September, October, November and part of December to swing trades with a few failed attempts at intermediate trades (that last for more than a week).  So we are using the techniques that work for the current market conditions.  If you are only a long term buy and hold investor, you may be waiting a long, long time before market conditions are conducive to making that a profitable strategy.  We go with the strategies that work and even though this may be a fast pace for many of you, this is what is working now.

You could always sit out this current cycle of short positions if you are tired or exhausted mentally.  OR a good fix for that is to have a very small position than normal so it won’t stress your nerves but keeps you alert and your head in the game.  A rest is fine by having no positions at all but keep monitoring what happens so you don’t totally get stale and indifferent to what is happening in the market.  Even someone as good as Tiger Woods will take some weeks or months to get back into tournament play after a 9 month layoff from golf so it is wise to be somewhat updated as to what the market is doing even though you may not have any positions.

Stock Charts, Stock Trading, Uncategorized, online stock trading, stock market commentary, stock market education, stock picks

Online Trading Software Part 2

December 9th, 2008

December 9, 2008 The most important part of your brokerage firm’s online trading platform is the charting. What information does it display and how easy is it to setup and change for different looks is the question that comes to my mind. For example, I like to use a lighter background with a darker price chart, green for fast moving average, red for slower moving average, orange for On Balance Volume (OBV), red and green for the MACD signal lines, red and green up and down volume bars, candlestick style price chart, yellow for %K and medium blue for %D, and possibly an orange histogram with the MACD signal lines overlayed on top of it. To get the full set-up instructions step by step, click here to receive the stock chart set-up instructions for all 5 brokerage firms from Schwab, Fidelity, Etrade, Ameritrade and Scottrade. Some people like a black background and that works too. It comes down to what you get used to and what suits your tastes. It is the reading and interpreting of the information is what is of prime importance. As I mentioned in the last blog post, Schwab has a tick chart available, the only large online brokerage firm that offers tick information at the moment. But it is very likely other firms will add that feature in. This can be set for 1 tick or all the way to 25 ticks. A 1 tick setting means that you want each and every order to show up on the chart, 1 tick for each order that goes through time and sales. See time and sales in glossary. To be continued . . . . . Time and Sales: The official record of all executed trades during a trading day. Each stock has time and sales and this is provided by most brokerage firms for no charge. You will see a window showing every order displayed with the time in hours, minutes, seconds and fractions of seconds. (hh:mm:ss.x), 12:31:06.3)

Stock Trading, Stock Trading techniques, stock market education , , ,

Successful Stock Investing and Trading

November 24th, 2008

When people are just starting out investing or trading in the stock market and I see the same pattern in their thinking when I meet them at seminars, answer emails, or read their comments. People tend to be focused on learning the techniques or the one technique that will make them a million bucks. And that is important at first but in reality, it isn’t the trading techniques that will make them successful—it is the emotional control and discipline that is required shortly after learning the actual technique.

Take the top professional sport athletes of especially individual sports like tennis, golf, swimming and many others. You notice that the top 20 players can at anytime win the tournament? The 20th ranked athlete can beat the #2 or 3 ranked person and sometimes the #1 person. Why do you think that is? You think it is their golf swing or technique in tennis or swimming? I don’t think so. I can visualize an old man saying “it is all in the mind” while pointing to his head. And it is true.

What kind of thoughts do you have when you trade? What are your expectations? What kind of emotional reactions do you have when you have a losing trade or set of trades or have a bad day? How do you view money? Does greed control you, are you a gambler, do you feel some sort of pressure to perform, do you need the money that you are trading or investing with to pay next month’s bills? These are all factors that influence the decisions you take with your trades. There is a lot more to this than technique.

I can teach you to be proficient at stock trading technically within a short period of time, perhaps within a couple of months. It is the emotional control that takes more time to learn. But if you can learn more about yourself before you open your first stock position, you will make much more money and have fewer mistakes early in your investing or trading career.

Mitch King, Founder
www.TradeStocksAmerica.com

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