Sunday, September 27, 2009

Consistent market theme

I'm very impressed by consistency of the story of which Mr. Market is telling me:

The past week is a temporary pullback/consolidation. We are approaching to a very important buy signal if the momentum of selling continues to dissipate. And some no-brainer trades.

I tell myself to be ready to own stocks, especially ones that demand high valuation. Sectors don't really matter as leisure, energy, technology, biotech, mining, and industrials all look quite strong. Recently we've seen out-performance of premium/growth names and lagging of discount/value names. I expect the theme to continue into November. Risk appetite in equities seems to be back on. Expect expansion of P/E.

Nice looking charts are abundant. Here are some examples:

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

day trading

Completely lost my voice this morning as I've slipped into recovery mode from trip to Boston over the weekend. This morning I woke up late for the NY open (which I regret every time).

The day got a bit brighter as some great intraday patterns began to form midday. Volume pick-up was somewhat unusual around 10am. Perhaps managers are chasing the market. By 10am, we held on to the level of yesterday's close, and we even made a fresh new highs in the morning.

I got into AXP on retrace. This tend to be the best patterns early in the morning, but I traded it anyway since the breakout occurs with great volume minutes prior, and a new high was made. It's very likely there will be a fresh new high with follow through.

Here's an intraday chart of AXP


a similar trade in X

Monday, September 14, 2009

Appetite for risk

I tend to turn away from the market at the worst of times. Last week was no exception. I find myself closing out long positions at the lows of the week, and have missed the rally last few days.

It was just another reminder the amount of patience successful trading requires. Funny that I find myself most successful after events like this. Knowing that I've missed out, it forces me to concentrate more on the tape and dig out those promising opportunities.

Today is a very convincing day as we had an outside breakout day. Appetite for risk seems to have come back. In almost every sector, we see high premium growth stocks surging and safety names lagging. Compiled a long list of promising stocks for swing trades. I tell myself to keep a close eye on them.

Went long on BTU today. Looking to go long on some energy names, premium retailers, and small cap tech on a pullback.

Currently hold (date of entry): MR (7/13), CSL (7/28), CAVM (7/30), DRYS(8/27), FCX (9/8), RIMM(9/8), BTU (9/14)

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

post labor day surge

I'd expect to see some actions post labor day and we got a few typical correlation plays this morning, particularly the weakness of dollar and strength of commodities.

The dollar broke out to new lows, and made a perfect 38.2% retracement shortly after NY open. Equities rallied after a brief selloff. Shortly after 7am there are some good trades based on relative strength. Entire energy space is incredibly bullish. Nat gas coming off the lows of last week. HES was among good candidates. It broke out of a falling wedge pattern, albeit on low volume. However it sets up for a few intraday plays. Tape rolled over midday, but caught on a few trades on the long side. (I always hesitate to fade gaps)


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

first post

Totally random at 2am, here I am, starting a blog for fun but more importantly to satisfy my curiosity, enhance my objectivity, engage conversations, and perhaps build trading/life discipline.

Food for thoughts on my first post. I've been thinking about the two contrasting points of view on success. Featured on last month's issue of Stocks and Commodities was an interview with Kevin Haygreen, the 25 year old trader in London, it was asked "Why do you think you became a successful trader?", he replied (what I think a quintessential response):


I believe I’ve become a successful trader because I wanted it badly enough, and I believed in myself. The way I see life is that it doesn’t matter what hand you get dealt, you play the cards you have. The only thing that separates the winners and the losers is one person wanted it more than the other. If you want something bad enough, then you’ll get it because you’ll do what you have to do to get where you want to be. For me, I spent a couple of years surviving day by day with only what was in my pocket and eating mashed potatoes every night for dinner so I could pay for my charting and datafeeds, and watch the markets every day. I had moments where I wanted to give up, but I kept going and I learned that for every low there’s a high, and eventually it all paid off.

Another view taken by Malcolm Gladwell in his book "Outliers", however suggests that:

Chance of success comes from our time, not just from our own efforts or talent.

In his "Fooled by Randomness" Mr Taleb seems to agree:

The great generals of the past, took considerable risk, along with thousands of others, and happened to win. Heroes won and lost battles in a manner that was totally independent of their own valor; their fate depended upon totally external forces. Heroes are heroes because they are heroic in behavior, not because they won or lost.
When we are investigating the causes of something, there is so much that goes into it. Our observations are obviously biased with benefits of hindsight. Where do we draw more objective conclusions from. Is there a better way to investigate?