LOL!Quote from mschey:
Once in a while, a stock gets away from me, at that point I shift gears with the strategy, and at some point I will likely average in. I also have a stop plan in place. And a S&R plan in place. I have found that I can almost always trade around my losers. The one strategy I absolutely hate is the flat dollar stop. But I look to that number as an indicator that I need to take aggressive action with this position, which usually means I need to trade out of it.
I am being a little ambiguous here, I realize that, I just don't want to give Don too many ideas for improving his boot camp!LOL!
Good trading to all!
Mike
Quote from Oz Cillator:
Shocking....isn't it?
Who knows....maybe one day you'll you agree I may be right about something?![]()
Quote from Don Bright:
Are you talking about Starwood (HOT) vs. PDCO or PTEN? In either case, they don't show up in our database of correlated pairs at this point. Let me know if you want to trade them a bunch, and I'll have some research done for you.
Don
Quote from Don Bright:
I've been doing it since the 1970's when the NYSE Specialist would "wire" us on the regional exchanges, telling us he had 200K extra IBM to buy (for example) on the opening. I would respond with "I'll sell 10,000 at 90.25, another 10,000 at 90.50, another 20,000 at 91.00)" etc., and I would get some or all of the order, knowing full well that I would be on the same "side" as the NYSE Specialist.
We have updated and automated much of this by now of course.
All the best (sorry for the "history" lesson).
Don
Quote from NYSEscalpa:
Why would you want to trade an oil stock vs. a hotel chain?? If you want to pair trade, do it with correlated stocks, in the same industry! Evaluate them on fundamental and technical merits, go long the strong one and short the weak one. Pay attention to equal capital allocation and the historical spread price in determining which pairs to trade.
When I was heavy into pairs, I would review 200 pairs daily to come up with a hit list of about 10-15 for the next day. Keep in mind, there are many long/short market neutral equity funds with teams of programmers, analysts and traders you will be competing against! This sector currently is the largest among single strategy funds. Just FYI. I am not saying you can't be profitable, but you must be well capitalized and know what you are doing! Good luck.
Quote from Cluseau:
hi Don,
thanks for taking the time to look these over. Patterson is the stock, PTEN. I trade both, have been. Picked starwood as soon as we had traction in spot oil and it (HOT) started to range trade(newyear). Patterson, well what can i say about it. As you can see, it's had quite a spike. Fortunately, i had a FULL line out from @$18.65 to $26.5. My last sale was actually yesterday morning, twice i sold avg. $27.15. I used margin to trade in and out of the entire move up because i want to sell at my full target price. Worked well, doubled my line in four months.
So, i noticed a shorterm 'affect' regarding PTEN and HOT. At this point, that is all it is. Intraday, when we have a pending move in oil or the day after we have a sizable move in oil; PTEN and HOT (oil service x. hotel lodging) converge and diverge within minutes of one another. It's logical. Nothing more, nothing less. My reason for bringing it to the attention to this forum is twofold.
Can we build a highly correlative shorterm model using the 2 sectors esp. the two stocks? And, i was hoping someone with greater knowledge could explain this reaction to the forum.
Suffice to say i am in no need of hand holding but would appreciate some data.
thanks for your time don.
alex