Quote from In2Deep:
Hey Rol, I know you may have mentioned this somewhere before, but how do you select stocks? Strictly by average volume/liquidity?
Yes In2Deep, volume/liquidity is one component. I have to be sure the symbol is tradable to avoid excessive slippage since I sell at market. In addition, I need to narrow down the list that the scan produces each day and volume is one way I do this. Price also is another factor. I do not want 100 shares of a $5 stock for example, because the profits will have a harder time outweighing the commissions.
I keep an exclude list that TS looks at each time it performs a scan. In this list are any stocks with margin restrictions that would reduce my BP. You can get this list from their website. Recently, I have included any Chinese companies since they have burned me.
My thinking is that most stock price movement is the same regardless of the symbol traded because the players are the same. I did not come up with my strategy this way, but here is an approach that could work: Come up with a strategy that works on an ETF like SPY, but then apply it to individual stocks to get more trading signals.
I once tried only tracking stocks that my strategy had done very well on in the past, but in practice, it did not seem to give me an edge. Just because a stock did great in the past, it does not mean the time you buy it is a guaranteed winner. I saw stocks that did poorly in the past do great when I bought them, and vice versa. I have concluded that this is just a numbers game in the markets and the stocks are simply the game pieces. Sort of like checkers.
I wanted the stock selection process to become ultimately like pulling a name out of a hat to randomize the entries and remove any human tendency to pick losers. I found that when I track too many symbols, I sometimes become over weighted in a sector.
The system buys a stock when my entry criteria are met, so I do not know in advance which stock it will buy. You can come up with a custom list you are comfortable with that includes your favorite stock if you want. As far as the exact entry/exit criteria, wellâ¦