An analysis of how not to set Stop-Limits:
In 2 days I could have made 50% on 2 stocks that I actually owned when they started to rocket up. Here's the setup:
I created a stock filter using Ameritrade's Advanced Analyzer. Studied daily charts to find ones that were at a low ebb in the beginning of what could become an uptrend. Found 2: MEDC and MCTR. Charts on these are attached
Scenario 1: MCTR
1. Bought MCTR at .94 on 1/8
2. On 1/9, MCTR started rising, so I tightened my stop loss
3. MCTR rose to 1.10 so I'm doing a jig...that's 17% rise
4. I set my stop to 1.08 (just a stop - not a stop-limit - bad move)
5. Then the inevitable drop - I'm stopped out with average sell price of 1.04
6. Take a look at the attached chart - it rocketed to $1.50. Damn! And it's still going. Didn't want to jump back in, because of fear it would drop like a rock any second.
Scenario 2: MEDC
1. Bought MEDC at 7.05 on 1/9
2. At the end of the day, MEDC started rising, so I tightened my stop-loss
3. MEDC rose to 7.50, so now I'm dancing again
4. I set my stop-limit at 7.40 as it rose to 7.60 (This time I wasn't going to get burned by the plain-old stop)
5. Naturally, I got stopped out at 7.40, so I'm very happy as I watch it hang there
6. Not so happy as I watch it rocket up to $9 at the close
7. Even less happy as it peaks at $10 in the morning of 1/10
I've been burned by not setting a stop when a stock was zooming up and missed the profits on the spike. So I thought I was being wise to set tight stops so I didn't lose the bulk of profit from these spikes. However, I'm not sure what the heck to do now. I've been burned both ways.
Any wisdom on this sad story of the big ones that got away would be appreciated!
Deb Trader
In 2 days I could have made 50% on 2 stocks that I actually owned when they started to rocket up. Here's the setup:
I created a stock filter using Ameritrade's Advanced Analyzer. Studied daily charts to find ones that were at a low ebb in the beginning of what could become an uptrend. Found 2: MEDC and MCTR. Charts on these are attached
Scenario 1: MCTR
1. Bought MCTR at .94 on 1/8
2. On 1/9, MCTR started rising, so I tightened my stop loss
3. MCTR rose to 1.10 so I'm doing a jig...that's 17% rise
4. I set my stop to 1.08 (just a stop - not a stop-limit - bad move)
5. Then the inevitable drop - I'm stopped out with average sell price of 1.04
6. Take a look at the attached chart - it rocketed to $1.50. Damn! And it's still going. Didn't want to jump back in, because of fear it would drop like a rock any second.
Scenario 2: MEDC
1. Bought MEDC at 7.05 on 1/9
2. At the end of the day, MEDC started rising, so I tightened my stop-loss
3. MEDC rose to 7.50, so now I'm dancing again
4. I set my stop-limit at 7.40 as it rose to 7.60 (This time I wasn't going to get burned by the plain-old stop)
5. Naturally, I got stopped out at 7.40, so I'm very happy as I watch it hang there
6. Not so happy as I watch it rocket up to $9 at the close
7. Even less happy as it peaks at $10 in the morning of 1/10
I've been burned by not setting a stop when a stock was zooming up and missed the profits on the spike. So I thought I was being wise to set tight stops so I didn't lose the bulk of profit from these spikes. However, I'm not sure what the heck to do now. I've been burned both ways.
Any wisdom on this sad story of the big ones that got away would be appreciated!
Deb Trader