Kooke, there's no easy answer to that but the best trades are usually where a combination of factors line up:
- the stock has fallen hard.
- is near a support level.
- has good buyer support and evidence of fading selling.
- is just above a round number (buyers tend to cluster at factors of 10 and 5 for psychological reasons. These often form temporary support levels, so it's worth buying at, for example, $3.11 or even better, $3.01.)
- ideally has gone parabolic, ie, panic selling has set in, which is usually the last gasp of an intraday down-move before the scavengers appear and drive the price back up. This is generally the moment of maximum opportunity.
- is caught in a general sell-off, rather than a sector-specific sell-off based on deteriorating fundamentals. eg, today resource stocks will be walloped and will drag down other sectors that don't have the same grounds for a fall.
- and finally - and this is the most important element - the stock must not have released an announcement that justifies the selling, eg, a profit downgrade. Buying in that situation sometimes pays off but premature buys can be massively destructive.
You don't need all of these factors to be in place to make a profit but the more boxes you can tick, the higher the probability of a successful trade. Be patient, be nimble and cut your losses quickly if a trade turns sour. For me, these are purely intraday trades and should not be held overnight unless there has been a genuine reversal over the course of the day.
- Forums
- ASX - Day Trading
- daytrade diaries... june 16
Kooke, there's no easy answer to that but the best trades are...
Featured News
Featured News
The Watchlist
HAR
HARANGA RESOURCES LIMITED.
Peter Batten, MD
Peter Batten
MD
Previous Video
Next Video
SPONSORED BY The Market Online