Quote from retire45:
Well... I started in the markets while in College trading penny stock IPO's.. quite risky but had a broker that did ok and did well.. Got back in markets early 90's... buying and holding.. didn't work well at all.. 95 or so got back into the pennies with $600 and worked up to 8k or so in about a year and a half.. then the dotcoms showed up... Got close to 200k by 2000 (everybody had returns like this), gave back 60k or so from 2001 to 2005... corrected by problems and have tripled the account last 18 months..
2001 to 2005 a strange time as mentally I wasn't there and was not doing well due to:
Over concentration, Trading too many (the wrong) different stocks, impatience.
The keys that have reversed things are
1. Focusing on a selection of very volatile but orderly basket of stocks usually over $30 (pricier stocks simply tend to move better without news events). This is done via a TC2000 Scan that yields about 500 stocks which I then manually review one by one. NYSE syocks tend to be better behaved that the four letter ones..<g> The idea is to avoid stocks that are "gappy" therefore news driven, tend to routinely violate prior day high/lows while in trend... etc.. SMSI and MBT no good.. MRO, CF good.. i.e. stocks that move in small but persistent orderly days.. that would bore a daytrader..
2. Usually not more than 10% in a stock (20% if a great setup).
3. Daily MACD must be in favor (preferably rising from a bottom) and Weekly not topping..
4. Patience waiting for the right conditions.. A great setup can make your month in a week if you wait for it as it WILL come.. ALWAYS does...
5. Avoid earnings reports.. unless the given sector has been blowing out earnings.
6. 3% stops on every trade... if a loss gets that far it tends to get worse... this is a work in progress though.. as different stocks need different amount or room... all comes down to how close to "protection" the entry is..
I do more work outside market hours for sure..