Watchlist for October 4th: Not much

Nothing exciting on watch. Seriously. This time I’m not just being lazy; I found no exciting setups.

LVCA has a nice breakout on Friday but I don’t play OTC BB breakouts. It is a pump (see the comments for details).

lvca

DYAI also a pump I think, on short watch, although I think it has another big up day in it. (Thanks to Preston for bringing it up in the comments below. I added it to the watchlist in response to his comments.)

dyai

Here is a chart of GSAE for posterity.

gsae

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.

ONCY's lesson: Don't sell a stock if it is banging the offer

I messed up an easy trade on ONCY today. Lesson: if a stock keeps trading only at the offer (ask) and not at the bid, and the bid keeps rising, it is probably going to continue to go up.

oncy_multiday

+    BOT    1,300    ONCY    false    Stock (SCM)    3.220    USD    SMART    09:32:08        6.50
+    SLD    1,300    ONCY    false    Stock (SCM)    3.300    USD    ISLAND    09:33:20        6.50

ONCY

Here is a screenshot of the time and sales from right before I sold (I sold at 9:33:20). It actually was not just printing at the offer, unlike how I remembered, but it was at least balanced between bid and offer and the bid did not drop after hitting 3.26.

Daily profit: $91.00

Weekly profit: $3583.25

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.

Update on trading Tim Sykes' system

My fairly consistent profits from trading using Tim Sykes’ system have continued. Despite some sketchy trading, my profits have been helped by the plethora of pump and dumps recently and me scalping TimAlerts for quick profits (in fact, my recent trade of RODM nearly paid for the TimAlerts lifetime subscription that I bought a year ago). I thank Tim for all he has taught me and I heartily recommend his Pennystocking Part Deux DVD to anyone who wants to learn how I and he trade stocks.

tim_profit_small
(click chart to enlarge)

Note that the profit on this chart does not include the profit from my watchlist longs, which are definitely in the style of Tim Sykes. As I write this I have accumulated $1770 in profits in that strategy over the last 40 days. See my recent detailed report on how successful those trades have been.

If you like more detailed statistics, here is a histogram of my profit margin on Sykes-type trades:

profit_histogram_small
(click chart to enlarge)

Unfortunately I am not the most experienced with creating histograms in Excel. No trades fall below the -16% return bin, but eight trades generated more than 22% profit (they are just thrown into the 22% bin; the largest profit margin was 51%).

Disclosure: See my disclosure policy.

Making money by buying stocks on my watchlist

I have netted $1,776.12 buying stocks on my watchlist since I started this blog. I have learned to buy stocks on simple breakouts by following what Tim Sykes teaches in his Pennystocking Part Deux DVD (and his other DVDs), although I do have my own style when playing these. While this is not large relative to my account or other profits, it is impressive because I am generally very poor at buying stock. I am satisfied with my gains so far and if I can keep generating such nice profit margins I may look to increase my position size. I have tweeted some of these trades (like my great trade of GSAE yesterday).

watchlist_longs_profit
(click chart for full-size chart)

Following are some details on these trades:

Average profit: 4.63%
Weighted average profit: 3.02%
Winning trades (%): 86.7%
Normal position size: $5,000.00

Ticker Type Shares Open Date Price Position Close Date Price Profit ($) Profit (%)
AXL long 1000 8/19/2009 $5.72 $5,717.00 8/19/2009 $5.99 $268.00 4.69%
RTK long 2000 8/19/2009 $2.44 $4,870.00 8/19/2009 $2.47 $60.00 1.23%
XIDE long 700 8/24/2009 $7.74 $5,414.50 8/24/2009 $7.85 $77.00 1.42%
VG long 1000 8/26/2009 $2.29 $2,288.00 8/26/2009 $2.58 $287.00 12.54%
HLCS long 2500 8/31/2009 $1.85 $4,617.50 8/31/2009 $2.08 $570.00 12.34%
HLCS long 1000 8/31/2009 $2.21 $2,205.00 8/31/2009 $2.30 $90.00 4.08%
SVA long 200 9/1/2009 $11.60 $2,319.00 9/1/2009 $12.02 $84.00 3.62%
GTN long 200 9/8/2009 $1.24 $247.00 9/8/2009 $1.28 $8.00 3.24%
EXXI long 4000 9/8/2009 $1.49 $5,940.00 9/8/2009 $1.40 ($360.00) (6.06%)
VVUS long 400 9/10/2009 $12.65 $5,058.00 9/10/2009 $12.68 $15.20 0.30%
IVAN long 2500 9/11/2009 $1.93 $4,812.50 9/11/2009 $1.86 ($175.00) (3.64%)
RAME long 4000 9/15/2009 $1.14 $4,540.00 9/15/2009 $1.26 $501.80 11.05%
YRCW long 800 9/24/2009 $5.99 $4,793.60 9/24/2009 $6.08 $74.12 1.55%
GSAE.pk long 1000 9/29/2009 $1.08 $1,075.00 9/29/2009 $1.32 $240.00 22.33%
VSR long 900 9/30/2009 $5.41 $4,864.50 9/30/2009 $5.45 $36.00 0.74%

Here is my reasoning for each of the above trades:

AXL    looking for continuation on strong breakout on (so-so) financing news — was up 117% previous day; opened red like market and I bought on red/green cross; got stopped out (was using too-tight mental stop); hit hod of 7.11

RTK    looking to short, opened red with market, but bought on red/green cross; sold with too-tight stop; was up on puffy news previous day 86%; hod was 2.93

XIDE    solid one-day breakout, bought on second up-day on red/green 3 min after open, sold as it fell off of 7.96 hod

VG    up from 0.50 in two days, showed big 50% gap up on day three and I bought right after open and sold quickly (was filled only 1k out of 2.3k shares due to routing issues)

HLCS    opened red (mkt gapped down 1%) then went green, had great breakout chart, made breakout previous day, bought (late) as it went green and broke previous day’s high of 1.78–went over $3 for a good chunk of time

HLCS    opened red (mkt gapped down 1%) then went green, had great breakout chart, made breakout previous day, bought here as it re-broke hod

SVA    was up from 7 to 9.7 previous day on 10x normal volume on some good news, strong throughout day; bought as it broke morning’s highs 2 minutes after open (slow due to computer issues, should have bought at 11.30), sold as it showed weakness; would’ve played larger but was distracted by computer issues

GTN    watched for big breakout above 1.14, but gapped above that to 1.24, tried waiting until it showed strength, should’ve just gotten in around 1.22; when I tried to get in I only got a tiny fill so I got out; it hit 1.48 less than 20 minutes later

EXXI    was big runner on earnings previous Friday, opened red, went long on green/red, got out after it failed at 5 cents below previous close; good trade

VVUS    was up big previous day on drug news, bought on breakout above 12.50, previous day’s high, was slow (even though I had alarm and order set), not good entry, so I got out quickly; also, it had been choppy the previous day

IVAN    significant break of 1.85, broke it in pre where I bought it 3 minutes before open (a little late too considering the break) broke my rule of not trading pre-market thinking it is meaningful for market … should’ve waited for open where I would’ve ween its price action suck and wouldn’t have bought

RAME    saw alerted by IL in GOTS chat (now Investors Underground chat) he was watching for hod test; looked at multiday chart and saw hod of 1.12 was a significant technical breakout. Bought when it broke hod and started printing 1.13s, sold 20 minutes later on a bit of weakness

YRCW    broke out above huge $6 mark in pre-market, opened at 5.90, bought right as it looked to break 6, it took a minute longer, but then it did and hid a hod of 6.20, I sold as it fell off that; later went below 5.70

GSAE.pk    huge run chart from .30 to .90 in two days, bought early in morning as it broke morning’s high of 1.05 and sold as it looked like it was fading a little; 5 minutes later it hit a high of $1.79 and quickly dropped off of there

VSR    gapped up on news above technical resistance at 5.20, bought right out of open (waiting for a tiny bit of upward momentum), hit hod of 2.70 then quickly dropped, I sold quickly as it tanked

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.

Trading based on whole number pivot points

One of the keys to making money trading stocks is to learn certain ways in which people behave in illogical or emotional ways and then trade to take advantage of those people. It is even better to understand why people act in certain ways so that the trader can be certain that they won’t change. One example of this is the pump and dump: I know that people are always greedy and lazy, so some people will always be willing to buy into the hype of a pumped company. I can profit from this by buying well-pumped stocks and by shorting them when the pump is over.

One of the things I have found with stocks is that people put a lot of importance on round dollar marks, such as $1.00, $2.00, $5.00. So if a stock breaks a round number it will tend to run. People like to think with whole numbers partly because it is easier to do mental arithmetic using those numbers. This leads people to place many buy and sell orders right around round numbers. For a stock at $2.90, there may be twice as many sell orders between $2.99 and $3.01 as between $3.01 and $3.10. So if a stock can break through a round number (in either direction) it will tend to run a bit. While this does not work all the time, it does work more than 50% of the time, at least with momentum stocks priced under $10.

While it is easy to find inefficiencies in the market, it is possible for many of them (like the January effect) to be arbitraged away. Therefore, it is always nice to see evidence that a particular inefficiency has been known for some time and yet remains; this indicates it is less likely to go away. Here is what the great trader Jesse Livermore wrote about round numbers:

Many years ago I began to profit from the simplest of type of Pivot Points trades. Frequently I had observed that when a stock sold at 50, 100, 200 and even 300. a fast and straight movement almost invariably occurred after such points were passed.

Thanks to Pradeep over at Stockbee for mentioning the above quote from Livermore’s book How to Trade in Stocks.

Another psychological pivot point that I use to trade is green/red or red/green, when a stock breaks above or below its previous day’s close. While the difference of a couple cents is minuscule in real terms, there is a big psychological difference between a stock being up for the day and a stock being down for the day. This is related to the tendency of traders to prefer to take small profits but not take small losses. Even if the amount of money involved is tiny it is psychologically painful to take a loss but pleasurable to take a gain.

Trade recap: The $1920 mug of hot chocolate

Today I shorted EMGE from $2.69 to $2.20 on 1000 shares and had another, tiny, trade. The big trade was me following a TimAlert trade alert from Timothy Sykes. I like to scalp those, and I was quite happy to buy 17,300 shares of today’s alert, RODM, at $5.724  and sell them 62 seconds later for $5.835 (net of commissions), making $1920. I have trained myself to respond quickly to alerts. So even though I was making hot chocolate when I got the alert, I was able to trade quickly after I flew from my kitchen to my computer like a bat out of hell. While I normally like to hold onto some shares of TimAlerts, I could not refuse the nice profit I had already accrued.

Daily profit: $2496.00

After I recorded the video I made the following trade that is reflected in my daily P&L:
+    SLD    1,800    RODM    false    Stock (NMS)    6.250    USD    ARCA    15:56:47        9.00
+    BOT    1,800    RODM    false    Stock (NMS)    6.210    USD    ISLAND    15:57:25        9.00

In after-hours trading I shorted SQNM for a lousy $20 profit:
+    SLD    500    SQNM    false    Stock (NMS)    3.000    USD    ARCA    16:35:56        2.50
+    BOT    500    SQNM    false    Stock (NMS)    2.950    USD    ARCA    16:37:46        2.50

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.

Trade recap: A plethora of errors

Today was a horrible day. Not because my loss was huge; rather, it was acceptable. It was horrible because I messed up what should have been an easy trade. I even messed up pronouncing “plethora” in the video. Despite following EMGE closely over the last two days and seeing the exact same pattern play out a week ago in GVBP, I messed up the trade completely.

Daily profit: ($1487.99)

Weekly profit: $192.74

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.

Trade recap for September 24 & watchlist


Trades at IB:
+    BOT    800    YRCW    false    Stock (NMS)    5.987    USD    SMART    09:30:25        4.00
+    SLD    800    YRCW    false    Stock (NMS)    6.090    USD    SMART    09:32:28        4.00
BOT    100    AM    false    Stock    17.71    USD    SMART    09:36:37        1.00
SLD    100    AM    false    Stock    18.1002    USD    SMART    09:38:13        1.00

Daily profit: $111.08

Watchlist:

The only stock that really interests me for tomorrow: EMGE, which was a big mover again today. I doubt there will ever be shares of it to short.

emge

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.

Watchlist for September 24: EMGE is the next pump!

Now that the previous big pump & dump, Genova Biotherapeutics (GVBP) has been halted by the SEC, it is time for the next big pump. I present to you, ladies and gentleman, Emergent Health Corp (Pink: EMGE). The stock is up 120% in two days now on modest volume of 700,000 shares per day. Why? Because they have a magic potion that will “revolutionize the vitamin business.” This magic potion is some random chemical or chemicals that they will add to a multivitamin. What will it do? Who knows? The company’s explanation makes no sense:

The company plans to introduce an adjuvant formula that enhances existing vitamin products currently on the market to assist in the production of normal cells.

If this were a legitimate product and not snake oil, the company might point out that the Vita-Stim Adjuvant(TM) improves the body’s absorption of vitamins (something that would be quite helpful and potentially lucrative). Instead, the company had this to say:

Our Vita-Stem Adjuvant(TM) compound stands to revolutionize the whole vitamin industry, as breakthrough adult stem cell based discoveries are further studied and introduced, providing high potency, scientifically researched regenerative properties to existing vitamin brands. It is predicted that today’s vitamin products will eventually become obsolete.

Yes, my friends, this company is putting stem cells into vitamins! Either that or they just cobbled together a bunch of pseudo-scientific babble for their press release (that seems more likely to me). This is a short on weakness or a long on strength, although considering it has already had a couple up days I probably won’t try taking it long. (Check out the company’s financials [pdf]: they had $90,000 in revenues in the past 6 months yet have a $40 million market capitalization, per Pinksheets.com)

emge

ILI – They had really sketchy positive drug-type news on a small study. I would short on red, long on green. I am not sure which way it will go so I probably won’t trade it.

ili

FTBK – Still short-biased. I did not like its choppy action today, though. I traded it today for $200. See my writeup on it from yesterday.

ftbk

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.

Trade recap for September 17th: "I'm going to destroy this stock"

When the Reaper says “I’m going to destroy this stock,” you might want to watch out. I posted that in the TimAlerts members-only chatroom (sign up here for Timalerts) as I advised anyone long AEXP to sell before I started selling short. AEXP was a Stockpreacher / Beacon Equity pump from $1 and I started shorting at $1.90. I averaged my position up to 6500 shares at $2.12 as it hit a high of $2.55. I later covered at an average of about $1.58 for a cool 25% profit margin. At the time I had finished covering my position my trading represented over 3% of the volume in AEXP today.

I also went long 20,000 shares of GVBP at $0.26 this morning in pre-market trading but that trade was busted as a trade-through. It was still a nice risk/reward: my risk was the $26 in commissions I paid and my potential reward was over $5,000. So even with a 99% chance of the trade being busted I thought it worth a shot.

I am happy with my trading today and am glad to be in the green for the week.

Today’s profit: $4,622.95

My trades today at IB:
BOT    0    GVBP    false    Stock (OTCBB)    0.0000    USD    ARCAEDGE    08:55:45        13.50
BOT    0    GVBP    false    Stock (OTCBB)    0.0000    USD    ARCAEDGE    08:55:48        12.50
BOT    10,000    AVVH    false    Stock    0.0100    USD    SMART    13:01:07        1.00
BOT    20,000    AVVH    false    Stock    0.0100    USD    SMART    13:01:30        1.00
BOT    200    ZOOM    false    Stock (SCM)    9.65    USD    SMART    13:23:14        1.00
SLD    30,000    AVVH    false    Stock    0.0090    USD    SMART    13:23:24        1.35
SLD    200    ZOOM    false    Stock (SCM)    10.29    USD    SMART    13:30:16        1.00

Beacon Equity disclaimer on AEXP:
aexpdisclaimer

Note: After I recorded the video and made this post I made the following trades:

+    BOT    10,000    SPDE    false    Stock (SCM)    7.497    USD    ISLAND    15:18:30        50.00
+    SLD    8,000    SPDE    false    Stock (SCM)    7.600    USD    SMART    15:19:06        40.00
+    SLD    2,000    SPDE    false    Stock (SCM)    7.670    USD    ISLAND    15:20:59        10.00
+$1072.30. My daily profit has been updated to reflect this.

SPDE_profit
(click image for full-size screenshot of my SPDE profit)

Disclosure: No positions. I have a disclosure policy.