Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Taking My Measly 17% Gain

One of the Asian gaming stocks I bought at the end of March was up 30% two days ago. Yesterday, however, a sell-off occurred and almost half of that paper profit vanished.

I watched the stock intermittently through the day as I was working. Near the end of the trading session, I had a decision to make: should I sell it? (to lock in the 17% gain that remained) or hold on to it? (hoping for a recovery in the future) It was an especially tough call to make because the trading volume was essentially equal to the previous day's volume. If the volume had been lower, that would have indicated more clearly to stay in the stock. If it had been higher, indicating a "distribution" day, that would have indicated more clearly to get out.

4:00 PM drew ever closer. The volume was neck-and-neck - how to make the call? Well, I had recently listened to a podcast interview by Bill O'Neil on investors.com. He had made a casual comment about having good sell rules that stuck with me. He said, "Stocks are kind of like people, when they act strange there's usually something wrong at a deeper level." Dropping 13% in a day, even on equivalent volume to the previous day, qualifies as acting "strange" in my book.

At 3:56 PM, I sold my shares and confirmed that the order had gone through. 17% locked in. I slept well last night.

As these things sometimes go, the stock rallied this morning. It is up to what would be a 24% gain if I hadn't sold it. Due to the rules of trading in this account, I can't just buy back the shares I sold - three business days have to pass for my sell order from yesterday to clear the system. Did I get "shaken out"? Was I hornswaggled and bamboozled by superior market operators who manipulated me into doing what I shouldn't have done?

Nah. I'm just a lucky mug who got to enjoy what would be the ride of a lifetime for most people - a 17% stock market gain in two weeks' time. Can you see me grinning like the Cheshire Cat? That's my sad face for the profits I "lost".

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Everybody - Back Into The Pool!

"People fear when they should hope and hope when they should fear." -Jesse Livermore

If you have investment money that you've pulled into cash or a money market account, consider putting it back at risk in the stock market. If you don't want to follow individual stocks, you could consider a no-load S&P 500 index mutual fund available through low-cost online brokers such as TD Ameritrade or Scottrade.

Stocks are now in a bull market and have been for about 3 weeks. This is not hyperbole, the fact is that the major market indexes have been climbing higher for the past 3 weeks. They have all crossed above their critical support lines (50 day moving average) and stayed above them with conviction. The past 10 trading days have been marked by the indexes rising on higher volume and falling on lower volume.

As I wrote in this article, it is very easy to miss what is happening today - now - due to fact that our news sources always lag truly current events. Pundits and analysts are still busy trying to decide which industry sector or government bureaucracy holds greater blame for last year's problems. (or greater credit for its triumphs)

I'm asking you not to get caught up in all that. Consider this an inviting you to take a closer look at the data for yourself, along with me, and make the decisions you may have delegated to others in the past. If you lost money in the recent bear market, do whatever you need to do to get the upset from that loss out of your system so that you can do today what is possible to make a better tomorrow.

Disclaimer: I do not currently work as a stock broker or professional money advisor. The views I have expressed are my own opinions. Investing in the stock market entails risk, including the possibility of losing all of your invested capital.