Investing in Stocks for Your Prosperity

Homepage  | Add to Favorites

 

Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Featured Articles

Rules of Investing in Penny Stocks
One of the most important things in buying penny stocks is rules. All of the big time stock traders that had to start out small swear by the fact that they had to follow their own set of rules or they would fail and lose money time and time again....



Day Trading & Investing Advice ... How to pick explosive stocks while reducing risk
In the stock market it's not unsual to see a stock go up more than 15% in less than 5 minutes on a good momentum day. It could seem that making money in the market is just a matter of buying one of those fast moving stocks and riding them for...

The Beginning of Living on Large Cap Stocks
Like many stock market investors/traders, I too, lost my shirt in the nineties. High-tech stocks always seemed to offer such huge returns, and when you analyzed the charts they looked like can't miss opportunities. But as the decade wore on my stock...


Spam Stocks, are They Working?
Spam stocks are quickly becoming a major factor in pump and dump techniques. A spam stock is usually a penny stock that has a decent financial outlook and has been on a flat line for quite a while. They almost always have some recent positive news...

HomebuilderStocks.com Reports: Commerce Department Announces Record Levels of Single Family Home Sales in June
HomebuilderStocks.com Reports: Commerce Department Announces Record Levels of Single Family Home Sales in June US Department Of Commerce Report States That Single Family Home Sales for June Increased By 1.4% over May POINT ROBERTS, WA. July...

HomelandDefenseStocks.com presents the “Homeland Security Stocks Online Investor Conference”, October 20th
October 6, 2004 HomelandDefenseStocks.com presents the “Homeland Security Stocks Online Investor Conference”, October 20th. TASER International, Inc., Markland Technologies, Law Enforcement Associates, Aegis Assessments Inc, Navicom...

How to Pick Hot Stocks with Momentum Stock Trading ... Making BIG cash on tomorrow's rise
Profitable day traders recognize that momentum trading is among the fastest & most effective ways to harvest good ol' piles of cash in the stock market. The problem is that if you don't know what stocks to look for and how to approach them while...

Making Money ..... Understanding the Stock Market & Why Stocks Go UP
In the stock market it's not unsual to see a stock go up more than 15% in less than 5 minutes on a good momentum day. It could seem that making money in the market is just a matter of buying one of those fast moving stocks and riding them for...

Stocks
Stock represents a share of ownership in a corporation. A bond is a security that represents a debt owed by the corporation to the bondholder, but does not include the ownership privileges of a stockholder. Stocks and bonds are the staples of many...

 
How To Buy Stocks That Are Hot With No Effort

Even traders want to be trendy when they buy stocks. Many traders make trades because of public opinion, not because the trade itself makes sense. When a particular stock seems popular, they rush in so they don`t feel they`ve missed an opportunity. As a result they end up buying at a price point where the trade can`t possibly work out. You should always avoid the emotion of the “hot” stock.

Here`s an example of what not to do when you buy stocks: Let`s say you`ve been following a particular stock which is in a “hot” sector, and it just announced a stock split. The stock is now at $18, and you calculate it could get to $25 or more by the time of the split. The market is currently bullish, and it looks like a great trade.

The problem is that the stock has been rising for the past four days. It started at $12, but you didn`t notice it until it hit $18, and it`s still rising. The stock split is a month away, and you know it`s likely to fall in price somewhat between now and the split. Still, everyone is talking about this stock. What if it continues to rise and becomes the next blockbuster? You become afraid that if you don`t make a trade you`ll miss a great opportunity. (And besides, you want to be able to tell people that you hold a position in this stock, because it makes you seem smart.) So you buy 1,000 shares at $18.50.

During the next two weeks, the stock goes to $19, then levels off, loses momentum, and drifts down to $17. Then a couple of leading NASDAQ companies give earnings warnings, the market drops, and the stock slides to $15, triggering the stop you`d set at $16 on half your holdings. The stock trades in that range for a week, and then begins to rise slightly going into the split. Your plan is to sell a day or two after the split. The stock rises a little beyond $20.50 by the second day after the split, and then the volume dries up and you sell it for a $2 profit. But since you stopped out of half your shares at $16, you lost $2.50 per share on that half, with a net loss of $.50 on 500 shares. What went wrong?

What went wrong was that you didn`t let the stock come to you. Instead, you chased it as its price rose, knowing perfectly well that, following the stock split trend, it would probably pull back before running up again. It was more


likely to pull back than it was to continue on an uninterrupted run to $25, and you knew that if you bought at $18 or higher you were probably paying too much. You ignored what you knew was more likely in favor of what might happen.

You should have given the stock a chance to come to you, at a price you felt was reasonable. If the stock had pulled a surprise and never gotten down to where you thought it would, that would be okay. There were many other stocks to trade, and some of them would have come down to your price. You didn`t have to own this particular stock.

What was the right way to play this particular scenario? When the market is bullish, it`s very likely for a stock to rise when a split is announced, drift down after a few days` rally, and then begin to rise again a week or so before the split. If that`s the trend and there`s no solid reason to think the stock will rise immediately, wait a few days for the stock to drift down and stabilize before buying it. If you had done so in this case, you could have bought it at $16.50 and then sold it for $20.50 for a $4.00 profit on the entire 1,000 shares.

If you had a solid reason to think the stock might continue to rally, you could have bought half the total number of shares you wanted at a price that might have turned out to be too high, and waited for a lower price to buy the other half. If it had turned out to be too high, it would only have reduced your profit. (No stock goes up or down in a straight line. Wait for a pullback before buying.)

There is a good way and a bad way to buy stocks or trade a “hot” stock. The good way requires discipline and careful market evaluation. The bad way is to trade from your feelings. As you can see from this example, it`s always more profitable to trade the good way.

About The Author

David Jenyns is recognized as the leading expert when it comes to designing profitable trading systems.

Discover the "secret formula" of trading that anyone can use to consistently generate BIG profits from the market by downloading your FREE copy of David's new Ultimate Trading Systems course.

Click Here To Download ==> Trading Systems http://www.ultimate-trading-systems.com

 


Visit these sites in the Information Organizers Network
Unusual Baby Names | Government Grants for Minority Businesses | Bad Credit Repair Fix | Affiliate Marketing | Arts Philanthropy Sites | Foundation Giving | Nonprofit News | Advantages of Owning Your Own Business | Small Business Management Articles | Community Grants | Education Grant Donors | Starting My Own Business | Children and Youth Grants | Best Internet Marketing Strategies | HUD Funding | Starting an Online Small Business | Government Grants for Youth | Prosperous Spirit | Health Grants | Civic Engagement Foundations | Business Home Income Online Opportunity | Best Small Businesses
Edited by:Michael Saunders

©2008 Information Organizers, LLC