Quote from jficquette:
As a general rule:
Try using rsi 2 with values over 99.7 on the daily as point to sell calls or buy puts.
Also don't short cheap stocks EVER, not EVER. Nothing under $40 bucks, $50 is better.
Don't short stocks that are not heavily owned by institutions. Nothing under 90%.
Don't short stocks that are having a basic change in ownership or equity. For instance don't short stocks with Buyout rumours.
Don't short stocks that are making new 5 year highs. You want some type of Resistance somewhere even if you have to go to the Monthlies to find it.
Don't short stocks that are heavily short.
Don't short stocks on the day that they announce blow out earrings, raise in guidance and stock buy back programs in tandem.
Bullish stocks up big due to a reason such as earnings generally end up closing on high. Consider selling otm calls at eod. They will be cheaper the next day even if prices continues up.
On big expansion days up, you can sell the next day if it gets to 1.414 of the expansion days range if it fits all the criteria mention earlier.
The biggest hits I have seen people take are on shorting cheap stocks and not understanding why the stock is up.
Anyone shorting cheap stocks will get hurt badly sooner or later.
The best scenario that I have found is shorting stocks that fit the criteria are those that had earnings after the market close on the prior day, had significant trading after hours the prior day and gap up the current day. Even better is if they have their press conference this morning. Generally you can get your best price during the conference when its going nuts.
John
Pretty good set of rules, John. Particularly the 90% threshold for institutional satruration.
I'd include seasonality. Institutions trying to play catch up for a lackluster year. Taking the bait.
High short interest is identified prey to the ax. Predictable, especially when over-leveraged. SNDK isn't exceptionally high but it's present.
There is also the notion that one trades against a market maker, NOT insitutions. He/they have an agenda, Generally related to inventory. Just because the ax shorts intra-day (in some cases more than once), doesn't in any way make it a short candidate for retail money. Retail isn't than nimble nor has the luxury of seeing lined up potential order flow. Level II is bells and whistles.
Lastly, the chart I posted reflects BOTH short term money and..............long term money. One glance, it's not a short. Well, at least not for more than chump change.