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The Downside of Trading on Information


The Downside of Trading on Information
Stockscores.com Perspectives for the week ending July 5, 2014

In this week's issue:

In This Week's Issue:

- Stockscores' Market Minutes Video - How to Trade a Slow Summer Market
- Stockscores Trader Training - The Downside of Trading on Information
- Stock Features of the Week - Mining Resurgence

Stockscores Market Minutes Video
A slow summer market does not mean there aren't profitable trades to be made. If you are selective and look for the right things, you can make hay while the sun is shining. Learn more with this week's Market Minutes plus get Tyler's regular market analysis.

http://youtu.be/cOa-65pmhys

Live Webinar Wednesday July 16 6:30 PM PT - 7:30 PM PT (9:30 PM ET - 10:30 PM ET)

An Introduction to the Stockscores Approach to Investing
The Stockscores Market Scan tool and strategies are efficient and effective ways to find stocks for your investment portfolio. In this webinar, Stockscores founder Tyler Bollhorn will show how this tool works and the daily and weekly processes he uses to find promising stocks.

Register at https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/4308848989650466305 or on the Stockscores.com home page.

See Tyler's day and swing trades live and in real time
A limited number of spots are available for three weeks of live trading via webinar at a cost of $299. See his trading screen from your computer and follow his trades as they happen. To receive an email with details and registration information, send an email request to tylerb@stockscores.com.

Stockscores Trader Training - The Downside of Trading on Information
n theory, information should make the stock market's world go round. Information about companies and their ability to make money in the future is what should determine share price. As the market learns of new information, price is adjusted up and down to reflect the value of that information.

This implies that investors should focus their analysis on information so they can predict where share prices should go in the future.

While this makes good sense, I have found it to be extremely rare that investors who use information are able to consistently beat the stock market. With smaller retail investors (you and I) in particular, the use of information for making investing decisions is more destructive than it is beneficial. Here are ten reasons why:

1. Information is Usually Already Priced In - most investors use publicly available information. That means it is widely known and available to anyone considering the stock. If information is available to a large number of investors then we should expect that the market will have priced that information in to the stock. Therefore, the information has not value to us.

2. Information Usually Comes with a Bias - as a general rule, people do what they are financially motivated to do. If someone is encouraging you to purchase a stock, there is a good chance that they have some financial motivation to do so. Before you trust the information you receive, understand the financial motivation. If you find the reason, you will often usually find that there is a strong bias in the information being provided to you.

3. Trading on Truly Insider Information is Illegal - there are few risk free trades in the stock market, but trading on significant, inside information is one. You stand to make a lot of money buying stock in a company that will be acquired by another at a premium tomorrow. If you have that information and act on it, you are trading on inside information and that can land you in jail.

4. Gathering Good Private Information is Expensive and Time Consuming - there are investors who are able to uncover information that is not priced in to a stock but is not considered inside information. This private information is valuable because it can lead to market beating returns. However, gathering private information typically requires significant resources, knowledge and time. For small investors, it is not feasible to do this kind of work across a broad range of stocks.

5. Information Causes You to Ignore the Market's Message - when you have an understanding of a company's story, there is a tendency to fall in love with that story and ignore new information that goes against your outlook for the stock. This leads the committed shareholder to hang on to a losing position, allowing the loser to bog down the performance of the overall portfolio.

6. You May Not Have All of the Information You Need - the market tends to focus on two or three key information points that affect the price investors are willing to pay for it. An investor who does a thorough fundamental analysis of the stock may still have an incomplete understanding of the company's business. If missing one of the key points, this investor can make a gross error in valuing the stock.

7. The Market May Not Be Trading On Fundamentals - in theory, stock price is based on the present value of future earnings expectations. In practice, there are often very non fundamental influences on share price. A large investor that has a liquidity crisis may be forced to unload a large position with little regard for price. Often, the laws of supply and demand affect share price even though theory tells us that they should not have an influence.

8. Your Interpretation May Not Be the Same as The Market's - Our mood affects how we judge information and the same can be said for the market in general. Your fundamental analysis may be correct in an optimistic environment, but if the market is in a pessimistic mood, the investment can lead to losses. Even the market is wrong, it is right.

9. There Is No Standard for What Information is Worth - There are many formulas for determining what a company's share price should. Many fundamental analysts look for stocks to trade at a certain multiple of their earnings with that multiple to be based on growth. However, there are great variations in accounting methods that can have a profound effect on how earnings are reported. More importantly, there is no rule that a company should trade at a certain multiple of earnings, that target multiple is just an opinion.

10. We Tend to Focus On Information That is Easy to Get - we often looks for the easiest way to achieve a goal. With information, there is a tendency to focus on the information that is front of us. Rather than work to find something to disprove our thesis on a stock, we instead look for information to strengthen our thesis. In doing so, we present our own biased outlook for our investment decisions that can often be very incomplete and wrong.

Ultimately, I look at the market's interpretation of all available information when I look at a chart of price and volume. It shows not only every bit of information detail but also what the market thinks of it.

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This week, I ran the Stockscores Simple Weekly scan in search of longer term position trades. This will be one of the scans and processes I will demonstrate during the webinar on July 16th (details on the home page of www.stockscores.com)

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1. T.LSG
T.LSG has been a leader in the gold miner turnaround and since Gold came to life early in June, the stock has been a strong performer. This past week, it was able to break through to new highs for the year through the $1 psychological barrier. Long term weekly chart shows good promise for the months ahead. Support at $0.90.

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2. T.CUM
T.CUM is breaking through resistance after forming a rising, optimistic bottom. This is a class turnaround chart and should result in strength over the months ahead. Support at $2.30.

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References
  • Get the Stockscore on any of over 20,000 North American stocks.
  • Background on the theories used by Stockscores.
  • Strategies that can help you find new opportunities.
  • Scan the market using extensive filter criteria.
  • Build a portfolio of stocks and view a slide show of their charts.
  • See which sectors are leading the market, and their components.

    Disclaimer
    This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Perspectives is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of Perspectives may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don't consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligence.

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