There is no choice now. The risk guys told me to specify a limit order for a cross, and I asked for like 5 cents below the closing print.
SPX looks more like a short squeeze than a counter trend move, COMP looks even worse. I missed closing bell by maybe a second or two.
You know nobody knows what's going to happen on Monday. Go play with your friends, or have dinner with your love - take your mind of it.
In this case there is nothing I can do except hoping and praying, a cross may still happen Monday morning at my limit prices, a 20% chance.
I know what you are talking about here, but try to find the good in this situation. Praying and hoping won't help you form the correct psycological pathways in your brain for future tough spots.
Other than that I have to wait for the open print, JBL looks like a perfect short lol . . . Didn't join the rally, finished near the low, selling volume picking up, the only thing I can hang my hat on is perhaps the $20 price tag will mean a quarter point gap rather than a 50 cents gap or heaven forbid, multiple pointer.
This is all crap. _NO_ONE_KNOWS_WHAT_IS_GOING_TO_HAPPEN_MONDAY_
BJ I am not too worried. Regardless of how much they gap down (or up although that may be wishful thinking), one downtick I am out.
IMHO, this is a bad way to go about this. Come Monday morning, do your standard routine, e.g., stock news, sector news, oversea news, etc, etc. You know the drill. Assuming nothing out of the ordinary, do the Opening Fair Value calculations. If the stock(s) open so that there is no Fair Value advantage to owning it, _TRADE_ your way out of it. If it opens "way" below fair value, hold on to it [even if you have a profit on the open!] and see if it comes back. If it opens "well" above Fair Value, sell it. You can even have some of these orders in before the market opens.
In summary, I would not "just get out." Just like any other trade, I would have a plan.
You have stayed cool through worse...
nitro