Archives for September 2005

How do I determine my sell points?

…This is an excellent question, if fact, it’s the toughest question that I face with every stock that I own.

If I own a stock and it immediately goes down, this is the easiest decision I must make – SELL and sell fast. I know how to cut my losses and have been doing it for years. Yes, it’s a blow to my self esteem but I always feel better when I see that particular stock several dollars lower a few weeks later. This is when I feel good about the insurance policy I have (sell rules) to protect my capital.

Take Accuride (ACW) for example: I recently purchased the stock on a “three weeks tight pattern”, a pattern that is followed by many traders. I placed a market order as the stock started to move towards the breakout level of $15.00 and was filled at $14.99.

For a lower priced stock such as ACW, I give it about 8% breathing room which brings my sell point to $13.79. I will not place a physical sell stop because I don’t want to be taken out of the position on false market maker moves. I reevaluate my position every night and decide if I need to sell “at the market” the next morning if it is below $13.79 or nearing the sell point that I established. Last week, the stock fell to $14.11 intraday giving most investors a scare but managed to close up at $15.18. This is the exact reason why I keep mental stops instead of physical stops. I only place physical stops when I will be away from a computer for an extended period of time or if my gains are sufficient and I want to protect them at a specific number, then I don’t care if the stop is triggered intraday.

I will not change my mental sell stop of $13.79 until ACW gains at least 20% from my buy point. If that time arrives, I will move my sell stop about 12% below the current levels. In this case, the numbers would read like this: ACW would be up 20% near $18 and my trailing mental stop would be $15.84. If the stock approaches this area or violates the number, I will sell “at the market” the following morning. Remember, circumstances play a big role in each decision. If outside events are influencing the stock, I must take that into consideration and base my decision on the additional information.

If ACW starts to use a moving average as support, my mental sell stop will always be slightly below the moving average, again giving it room to breathe. If any of my stocks gain 50%, I start to place a physical stop about 10%-12% below the current levels to protect the gains.

Finally, if I have not been sold out of a stock but I start to see the stock act in different ways than it was while up-trending, I will sell immediately (examples can be a climax run, slicing a major moving average, breaking a strong trend-line or possibly a string of weaker earnings reports). Use discretion and develop a feel for what works best for you.

If Accuride (ACW) tanks today and I am forced to sell even though I only purchased the stock in the past week, I will not allow it to hurt my emotional balance and I will move on to the next opportunity because I know investing is about percentages and NOT about being right on every trade.

Below are some basic sell rules that I follow:
Sell all stocks that fall 7-10% below your purchase price. Don’t ever allow a 10% loss double into a 20% loss because of stubbornness or the emotion of hope (hoping the stock will rebound). It is perfectly fine if the stock is sold out for a 7% loss and then it rebounds and you feel you would like to take another position in this stock.

If you feel something is wrong with your stock and the action looks odd but you are only down a few percent, sell anyway, why take a chance, especially in a bad market environment. This is the only form of insurance in the stock market.

When a stock has been is a solid up-trend and then it starts to move sideways, this is referred to as churning. This can be the first signal to the end of the run. This may serve as the perfect time to lock in your profits and watch from the sideline, remember, you can always get back in.

Learn to sell into strength; you can never go wrong by selling into strength before the stock peaks. No one and I mean NO ONE gets out at the top and if they do, they were lucky. No one and I mean NO ONE goes broke by taking a profit after an extended run or up-trend! Don’t allow the emotion of GREED to steer your ship, take profits when necessary, don’t get greedy.

Stop Loss, Trailing Stops and Market Makers:
Many investors try to lock in gains or prevent losses with a predetermined stop loss or trailing stop loss. This is an excellent tool but has become an easy target for market makers and program traders to manipulate.

For example: You buy XYZ stock at $50 and enter an automatic stop loss at $45 to protect your portfolio from extensive losses.

Market makers can see this entered stop loss and play the market in order to wipe out your shares and pick them up at cheaper prices. They can bid down the price to $44.50 or so and grab your shares and then bid up the price back to the $50 range – all in one day. I have personally seen intraday manipulation of stocks being bid down, only to close for minor losses or slight gains. Accuride is a great example from last Thursday as it was down over 6% intraday and then closed up over 1%.

A trailing stop is a feature that allows the investor to determine a % point at which their stock is sold.

Example: If you buy 100 shares of a stock at $50, you can select a percentage at which your stock is sold, this percentage follows the stock up in price. So if you bought 100 shares of XYZ at $50 and put your percentage at 8%, your stock will be sold at $46…BUT, if your stock advances to $60, then you will have a new sell point at $55.20 (8% below the high of $60). In other words, your sell stop trails or follows your stock without you having to cancel out and resetting a new sell stop each time your stock goes up in price.

How do you protect your portfolio without letting market makers trip your stop loss for a premature exit?

I use a predetermined mental stop loss that is only implemented after the market is closed for the day. I take a look at each holding and determine if it should be sold at the market or intraday the next trading day. I predetermined my sell level when I bought the stock, so most emotions are already taken out of the equation.
If you invest in quality stocks with solid fundamentals and technicals, there is no need to constantly worry about huge losses in the matter of one or two days, barring a tragic event within that particular company.

Finally, Post Trade Analysis:
Post trade analysis could possibly be the most important key to unlocking your investment potential. Every investor must analyze their past trades. By analyzing your past trades, you can focus in on your mistakes and pinpoint the downfalls in your methods.
Ask yourself:
How many stocks have you bought in the past 12 months?
How many went up?
How many went down?
How long did you hold these stocks?
Why did the stock work?
Where did it go wrong?
Did the fundamentals breakdown?
Did the stock send key technical red flags before a major collapse?

Most investors skip post analysis and consider it a waste of time to look at the past. Many investors are scared to look at past trades; they don’t want to see the extent of the damage. An investor will never be able to take a step forward without looking over the past success and failures in their portfolio. In order to focus on weak areas in your investing methods, post analysis is the place to start. Post analysis with the aid of charts will show you if you bought too soon, sold too late, sold too early or bought the wrong stock all together. Print out a chart of all stocks that you sold and plot your key entry and exit points. Look for base building, accumulation, distribution or any other components that help shape your final decisions. Compare your stocks to sister stocks and see if similar patterns occurred. Did any sister stocks start to rise or fall before your stock? Post analysis is like looking in the mirror; you have no where to hide and only the truth to seek.

After several post analysis sessions, you will notice similarities in your buying and selling patterns. Similar mistakes or successes will become apparent. Focus on both the good and the bad. This post analysis allows the educated investor to suck in their pride and take responsibility for their own actions.

This is the starting point to correcting mistakes and growing your strengths!
Piranha

Weekly Commentary Insert

Here is a partial insert from our most recent weekly screen:

Market Overview:
With the end of this weekend, we are greeted with the end of the summer and the end of vacation for most major institutional traders, managers and players. I have been speaking about the slow summer months and the thin trading that usually accompanies these months, followed by stronger fall months and typically solid January and February months. I will now present you with hard data to support the statements that I have been making all summer long. An old saying on Wall Street goes like this:

“Sell in May and go away”

The data that I will present has been researched in Hirsch Organization’s Stock Trader’s Almanac and an article written by Elizabeth Thompson. They explain that the market has a very distinct seasonal indicator, one that was popularized as the “Halloween Indicator”, directly relating to the quote above.

According to the Almanac, if an investor invested $10,000 in the DJIA on November 1 and sold on April 30 every year from 1950 to 2004, they would have earned $492,060. If this same investor did the opposite and had bought on May 1 and sold on October 31 from 1950 to 2004, a $318 loss would have resulted. That is an amazing stat, one that is difficult to fathom. This trend extends outside of the American stock market as an article from December 2002 of the American Economic Review says that such a statistical pattern existed in the U.K. stock market as far back as 1694 and still exists today.

As I have mentioned many times in my daily and weekly commentary, big time Wall Street fund managers and traders go on vacation to the Hamptons, upstate lake side homes and international destinations. While these investor leave, they sell their weak holdings and have their staff sell anything that becomes weak while they are gone. They basically clean house and sell any investments that can’t survive while that are not at the helm. This results in the thin volume that we see year in and year out from June to August.

According to Elizabeth Thompson’s article Gone away for the Summer? It’s Time to Come Back, she states, “that the financial world encourages investments in the November through April period more so than in the May through October period.” She further states that January is the month that employees sign up for 401(k) plans while IRA’s have an April deadline which requires investors to place more money in their stock related retirement funds. This type of setup brings an influx of money to the table during the beginning of each year and naturally pushed prices higher before the flat summer months when they typically correct.

September is historically one of the worst performing months in American stock market history but it can also present an ideal opportunity to place positions on stocks that are showing excellent relative strength. Typically, these stocks go on to be market leaders and breakout after Halloween and into the New Year. November through February are some of the best performing months in Wall Street history but if you wait to place positions at the end of this range, you may be buying extended stocks that are poised to drop as the spring ends, creating losses in your portfolio. There are always exceptions to historical data and the rules so we want our MSW community to follow the daily and weekly action of the market before buying and selling. One more study suggests that the market will continue do trade the way it has traded for the first five months of the year. If this scenario holds true to 2005, we will be stuck in a sideways market for another four months. Regardless, I will be here researching the leaders and trends and will give you my best analysis outside of predictions and historical data. I felt that this historical data would help some investors realize that the market does work in predictable ways from a long term macro view.

As for this week’s market action: The unemployment rate fell to a four year low of 4.9% while the price of crude oil futures fell $1.90 to $67.57 per barrel. Gasoline futures fell 22.53 cents to $2.1837 a gallon as the national average price at the pumps rose to $3.00 per gallon. I filled up my tank yesterday for a total of $46.53, the highest price I have ever paid at the gas station (luckily, I don’t drive an SUV). Just a few years ago when I lived in NY, I enjoyed paying $0.99 in New Jersey because the price in NY was higher at around $1.29 per gallon. I didn’t go out of my way to fill up in NJ but the $1.29 now seems like a huge bargain compared to today’s prices.

The NASDAQ managed a weekly gain on below average volume but it did stay above the key 50-d m.a. We saw an increase in the daily new high ratio mid week and a slight decline on Friday but that is mostly due to the holiday weekend. The DOW was up for the week but remains below both key moving averages. Looking at our weekly list of stocks, I can say that they are some of the best performing stocks in the market over the past several months. This list may contain some stocks that will become the leaders in the next rally that may happen near Halloween if the analysis and data from above holds true.

Enjoy the long Labor Day holiday! Keep the people from the south in your thoughts and prayers. Also remember that the stock market is closed on Monday so there will not be a daily screen. We will be back on Tuesday with a brand new quality daily screen!

Piranha