Quote from 1a2b3cppp:
I may be falling asleep, but can you please rephrase that?
Yeah, not very clear, so let's start with the table I meant to have in the first post--basically the levels using 2% threshold...
10.82
10.61
10.40
10.20
10.00
9.80
9.61
9.42
9.24
9.06
8.88
8.71
You start at $10 (just a number, nice and round). So you sell after a 2% gain or buy again after a 2% decline from $10 ($10.20 and $9.80, respectively).
Now, say $10.20 is hit, so you sell the position initiated at $10 and are flat with a new buy order at $10 (right, 2% decline). Problem is, if $10.40 is reached (the next 2% level from $10.20) you have no shares to sell, so you just missed out on a 2% rally. All you can do is update your levels and enter a new buy at $10.20. Now you have two limit buys sitting at $10.00 and $10.20. So on until a 2% decline reaches one of those buys.
This happened to me much of this year as the market melted higher. Even right now I am flat waiting for my next level to be breached. It got within 8cents before the recent pullback.
Hope that helps. It is in no way perfect, but does provide some extra income in a flat, channeled market or when the market dips then recovers.
As an example, I implemented this right at the May 6th flash crash.
So I bought 5/6, then more at 5/19. Holding two levels.
Then sold on 6/15 as a rally ensued.
Market dropped and bought on 6/29, then promptly sold on 7/7 and 7/23.
I'm now flat as market rallies
Pullback and I buy on 8/11 and 8/24,
selling those two positions on 9/1 and 9/13.
Once again flat.
Had a quick final buy and sell on 11/16 and 12/3, respectively.
And I'm flat and have been since 12/3.
Works for me, I'm sure others have reservations or don't like it, but to each's own...
Cheers and get some sleep,
masterjaz