Trading MDR On An Otherwise Quiet Day
My day was really dominated by one stock. I traded several stocks on the day, but all with 100 shares, since I didn't have any confidence in their setups... I was just taking small gambles.
I liked MDR though, and so I watched it very closely, mostly because I didn't feel there was much else happening. Volume today, was pathetic (until the close, that is) and as it was the last trading day of the month, I planned on taking it easy no matter what.
MDR was on the HCPG watchlist last night for a move up to $62. However, they added a caveat that they thought the stock needed "more time." Apparently, the stock didn't want to wait. It spiked nearly 2 points in the first 15 minutes of trade before taking a breath, at around $61. At this juncture, the stock needed to base before it could move much higher, and so it was time to chill and watch.
About a half hour later, the stock worked its way back up to $61 and I bought a few hundred shares with an average price of $61.05. He moved up and so I bought 100 more at $61.20. Now, I threw some sell limits out there up in the $61.80-$61.90 area, but they weren't hit.
Instead, the fucker reversed.
I wish I had sold out of all my shares, but I wasn't quick enough. This is a problem I have with the target system... if I'm expecting the stock to trade higher, and it fails, I'm not quite sure how aggressively I should be moving my stops up. I probably shouldn't have held my position as the stock dipped below $61, but I did.
In fact, I bought a little more at $60.89 and $60.90. So I had 600 shares, which lately, is a large position for me.
But man... that's when "the stand-off" began. For the next 20 minutes or so, the dude traded in a dime range. My "out" was $60.80, and so having "the toad" (Wincity's technical term) trade pennies above this level for such an extended period of time wore out my nerves. I flaked and sold 300 shares at an average price of $60.86. The remaining 300 I left stopped at $60.80.
I noticed on the 15 minute graph that MDR was making some NRIBs, or something... I went over to Jamie's site to see what I could find... some answer or something. From what I could figure out, he liked the setup (meanwhile, Jamie, if you're reading, am I right to think those are NRIBs on the 15 minute graph from 11:00-11:30 today?). So when the stock cleared the top of the first 15 minute bar in the "set" I bought 200 more, at $61.17. So I had 500 again and the stock began to move in my favor. I actually felt confident that I was going to be right with this one.
Still, I flaked and sold 100 at $61.34 and another near the morning highs, at $61.42.
But with my last 300, I held, and I was fairly satisfied with the results. I limited 200 of the 300 out at $61.90 expecting resistance at the old high of $62. So far, so good. The last 100 shares, I really wanted to hold, so I set my stop low, at $61.25, giving the stock plenty of room. As it traded up, I moved the stop below the previous 15 minute bar.
After the stock cleared $62 with some "brio," I decided to move my stop just below the most recent price level. The low of the move, at 12:55, was $61.86, so I put my stop at $61.85.
Well guess what? The motherfucker came down and stopped me out, filling me at $61.78, the low of the fucking move. After that, it sailed back up over $62, reaching a high of $62.72 before reversing lower to close at around $62. So I was pissed. A good trade, but I still managed to get myself stopped out at the low of a move for some shares.
I finished the month with a green day, and so, I'll take it. But man, I'm itching to start sizing into these positions more. I felt confident with this trade after it cleared $61.17 the second time around... perhaps I'll start getting that feeling more.
Also, the fact that my worst trades of the day were made with small size I also take as a good sign.
Tomorrow I'll post a "monthly review" since I set some monthly goals for myself in May, I want to assess how I did. Also, bloggerdotcom has been teasing me with some new post that he may or may not have written... that will drop, eventually.
Have a good weekend, stock market bitches.
Here's the stats:
P&L, $122
Best, MDR, $243
Worst, RIG, -$89
4200 shares traded.
9 stocks traded, 4 winners, 5 losers.
4 comments:
Nice catch on MDR, dude. Good trade too.
Not to nitpick, just a comment. I feel your first entry is a bit hasty. A crazy stock certainly could spike up to $62 and beyond, but more often than not the move would reverse due to lack of proper consolidation.
It's hard to hold winners especially after seeing your profit taken away repeatedly. I was shorting the stupid DLTR from yesterday. I was in the green many times by $0.30, yet the toad, or the fucker, repeatedly put me back in the red. Today I was green again by $0.30 but seconds later, I was red again. Finally I gave up and covered at $37.53, leaving at least a fast $.40 at the table. The toad was below $37 most of the day. Disgusting.
Sometimes I feel we should just visualize where the stock could go and forget about it. Set a reasonable stop. In the case of DLTR, I don't think a stop is needed at all. And it could easily fall $1 more Monday.
What a market. Everything is on fire. Retailers. Shippers. Truckers. Oilers. Tool makers. If you strip financials and homies from S&P, I bet we're probably at or near an all-time high.
And the bears think we're in a bear market. HA!
DT, I wonder if you noticed ENER and PVA at all? Were they on HGPT's list?
DT, 30 min chart double doji's 3,4/30 then rally. I would agree hasty trades loose $.
April and May have been pretty tough months for most traders. Trendless low volume back and forth price movements is exactly the kind that is most dreaded. I'm glad that i had the VO as a benchmark, so i know i'm not the only one who sucks..
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