Placed 9 opening orders and didn't get filled on any. I use a .5% envelope, and to go any lower would increase the risk.
I bought IBM when it bounced from the 107 support for a 29c scalp. + 264 (290-26)
It was clearly a sell short day, but I was hesistant to short since in recent market action, the market has sold off in the morning and rallied towards the close.
I scalped IBM later in the day, when it broke the 107 support momentarily and than bounced back for a 20c profit.
+ 174
Overall : + 438 after commissions
I decided to call it quits since I have have been fairly inconsistent lately, and wanted to quit when I was still up for the day.
I would like to improve in the following areas in Feb.
- Discipiine
- NO discretionary trading
- Improve my exit methodolgy
- Speciialize in a few stocks, since the SPDR's and Q's are really hard to trade.
- Quit trading when I am down 300 for the day.
I think that the last one on my list is the most important. I have noticed that on days that I'm down, I start taking unnecessary risks, like going for more size and random trades.
cheers,
Jim
I bought IBM when it bounced from the 107 support for a 29c scalp. + 264 (290-26)
It was clearly a sell short day, but I was hesistant to short since in recent market action, the market has sold off in the morning and rallied towards the close.
I scalped IBM later in the day, when it broke the 107 support momentarily and than bounced back for a 20c profit.
+ 174
Overall : + 438 after commissions
I decided to call it quits since I have have been fairly inconsistent lately, and wanted to quit when I was still up for the day.
I would like to improve in the following areas in Feb.
- Discipiine
- NO discretionary trading
- Improve my exit methodolgy
- Speciialize in a few stocks, since the SPDR's and Q's are really hard to trade.
- Quit trading when I am down 300 for the day.
I think that the last one on my list is the most important. I have noticed that on days that I'm down, I start taking unnecessary risks, like going for more size and random trades.
cheers,
Jim
