Weakness indulged equals greater
weakness. Strength exerted equals greater strength.
-Carlos Casteneda
Choosing which stocks to trade is as critical to profitable trading
as the methodology for strategy you apply or understanding market
dynamics.
| I'm interested in
point moves, not percentage moves |
In my experience, what happens before a trade contributes to success
as much as what happens during a trade. Trading success depends
as much, if not more, on which stocks you're in as it does on being
able to call short-term market direction. Simply, as a short-term
trader, I need to be in stocks that are moving. A major reason my
Hit-and-Run strategies work is that I use them on the correct stocks.
Below, I'll describe some of the characteristics I look for in
stocks. This is how I focus on a relatively small number of names
among the thousands of possible stocks to trade.
ABCs of stock selection
I've created an easy-to-remember acronym that will allow you
to establish a process for focusing on high-potential stocks:
OCEAN. Each letter stands for a criterion I use in stock
selection.
"O" stands for observation. Speculation is largely observation--pure
and simple. First, I've observed that higher-priced stocks make
larger moves on a daily basis than lower-priced stocks. As a short-term
trader, I'm not interested in percentage moves but in point moves.
A 5% move in a $100 stock is much bigger than a 10% move in a
$22 stock.
| Short-term traders
need to be in stocks that have shown they can move--and
move big |
Second, look for situations in which you can put pieces together,
whether multiple signals or recognizing how a long-term pattern
has combined with a short-term pattern to create a higher-than-average
likelihood for trend continuation.
One of the most important criteria in assembling a hit list is
to observe which stocks outperform the rest--which stocks
have high relative strength over the intermediate term.
Two shorter-term relative strength methods I developed for identifying
the right stocks to trade are intra-day relative strength
and day-over-day relative strength. For example, stocks
in an uptrend that stay strong as the market falls in the morning
are excellent long-side candidates when the market stops going
down. If market dynamics reverse, the stock may explode. Also,
stocks that remain resilient despite a strong overall market decline
are interesting long candidates the following day.
Another observation to make is whether a stock shows persistence
or not. A stock closing near the top of its range benefits the
short-term trader, as stocks in fast moves tend to close at or
near the high (or low, for downtrending stocks) of the day. Also,
the propensity of a stock to have periods of great velocity--that
is, to move a large distance over a short period of time--is vital.
Short-term traders need to be in stocks that have shown they can
move--and move big. Ninety percent of the time, I trade in the
direction of the trend because surprises happen in the direction
of strong underlying trends.
Finally, if a stock consistently trades above its rising 50-day
moving average, this is often a good tip-off to a developing strong
uptrend.
"C" stands for capitalization. As I mentioned before,
I create two hit lists. One is for smaller capitalization stocks
that typically have an average daily volume of under 300,000 to
400,000 shares.
| Ninety percent of
the time, I trade in the direction of the trend because
surprises happen in the direction of strong underlying trends
|
Note! When I wrote Hit and Run Trading, I found that stocks that
traded with an average daily volume of under 200,000 shares best
fit the bill for small-cap stocks; however, as the market has grown
and the number of players has expanded, I have noticed that stocks
that trade up to 400,000 shares behave similarly to those that trade
lighter volume.
These small-cap, less-liquid stocks often make explosive moves,
as once an institution makes a commitment to accumulate a position
(or exit a position), their presence becomes quite evident on
the tape. Once an institution decides to get involved, it's not
worth their while unless they accumulate a meaningful position.
This means size to buy (size bids) on the tape. Stalking small-cap
stocks for size bids (and offers) is one of my bread and butter
strategies. Size to buy in trending small caps is one of the best
trading edges available, but you have to be watching a manageable
list of strongly trending names to see what's going on.
| I'm looking for expansions
out of pullbacks or consolidations |
"E" stands for expansion of range. Often large moves and
new legs begin with an expansion in a stock's daily range, where
buyers overwhelm sellers (or vice versa). Further, since the nature
of trends is to thrust, pause, and thrust back in the direction
of the underlying trend, I'm looking for expansions out of pullbacks
or consolidations.
"A" stands for ADX. The Average Directional Movement Index
(ADX) is an indicator that measures trend strength (but not direction).
Not all trends are created equal. Since the nature of strong trends
is to persist, high ADX readings are a valuable tool to help identify
which trends may turn into runaways. Pullbacks in runaways usually
last no more than a few days. Although those momentum stocks may
be very volatile intra-day, for the agile, disciplined trader,
this volatility offers opportunity. Since momentum begets momentum,
I stalk the highest-momentum names for signs of continuation.
| Momentum players
must be willing to buy high and sell higher |
"N"Stands for new highs/new lows. Although many investors
are cautious about buying new highs (or shorting new lows), believing
the name of the game is to buy low and sell high, momentum players
must be willing to buy high and sell higher. A stock must make a
new high before a series of new highs is scored. Scanning new multi-month
highs and lows will provide many good candidates.
The Process
To find stocks that meet these requirements, I begin by filtering
those stocks that have made new 52-week highs (and lows) through
my data service, and then I filter those stocks with high ADX
readings, and then look for the types of price patterns I've described
here (and the others I discuss in my daily "Momentum Stocks Insight"
commentary).
Starting out with a sound foundation of stocks to trade is essential
to any trading approach. Selecting stocks that meet the criteria
outlined above allows you to focus on a small number of high-potential
stocks out of the universe of tradable stocks.