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Focus on the Trade


Focus on the Trade
Stockscores.com Perspectives for the week ending September 9, 2014

In this week's issue:

In This Week's Issue:

- Traders' Edge - Juniors Continue to Lag, Large Cap Risky
- September Webinar - The Tools of Stockscores.com
- Stockscores' Market Minutes Video - The Hazards of Trying Too Hard
- Stockscores Trader Training - Focus on the Trade
- Stock Features of the Week - Pullback Shaping Up


Traders' Edge - Large Cap Risky, Small Cap Quiet
The junior markets continue to lag the strength of large cap stocks. The Baby Boom demographic is more interested in buying dividend paying stocks than speculating on the juniors. Select stocks with the story to excite investors can still go for big moves but you have to be very selective. Focus on stocks trading abnormal volume with good liquidity, you can scan for those with the Stockscores Market Scanner. Remember that this group tends to perform best from October till May so there may be light at the end of the tunnel.

Many large cap stocks have up trends that are going parabolic to the upside, a worrisome trend that could end badly. While it is hard to sell a Bank, Pipeline or Railway stock when they continually march higher, the parabolic trend sets them up for a correction. No sign of weakness yet but watch them closely.

September's Free Webinar - The Tools of Stockscores.com
Wednesday Sept 10 - 6:00pm Pacific, 9:00 Eastern


During this webinar, Stockscores.com founder Tyler Bollhorn will show you the tools of Stockscores and how your portfolio can benefit from their use. Even veteran users of the site are likely to discover things that they never knew about what you can do with Stockscores.com. This is a free webinar. Register at:

https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/327138055163086593

Stockscores Market Minutes Video - The Hazards of Trying Too Hard
Make stock trades on their merit rather than external influences that come with trying too hard. What are the factors that cause marginal trades? Plus, Tyler's regular market analysis.

http://youtu.be/rSnRi0U5cK0

Stockscores Trader Training - Focus on the Trade
What are your motivations for trading the stock market? If you a relatively normal person then it is likely that you trade to make money. However, I have found that trading to make money is dangerous because of the emotional attachment we have to our cash. The best traders have different motivations.

Consider something as simple as crossing the road. What do you think about when crossing a busy street? Are you solely motivated to achieve the obvious goal of getting to the other side? Not likely. You are probably thinking a lot about getting to the other side without getting run over.

While this seems obviously silly, the correlation that can be made to trading demonstrates an important point. When we focus on money, when we are motivated by greed, we tend to ignore the obvious. If you are trading to make money then a number of psychological problems enter the trading decision.

First, we worry about missing out on an opportunity. We may look at a trade and think that it is not ideal but still "pretty good". We remember the last "pretty good" trade set up that came along and how it did really well. We remember the pain that we associate with missing out on that pretty good trade set up that we ignored and that motivates us to take this trade, even though it is less than ideal.

Would you cross a busy road if you had a "pretty good" chance of making it without being hit? Would you jump out of an airplane if there was a "pretty good chance" that your parachute would open?

Second, when our trading decisions are motivated solely by money, we tend to work very hard to find something to trade. While a good work ethic is important to be successful in life, working hard to identify opportunities in the stock market is not always good. Doing so means we work hard to find things that are not obvious, and therefore, may not be good enough to even be worth trading. I find that my very best trades are the ones that I don't have to think twice about, those that jump off my trading screen when the stock is in front of me. I don't work hard to find them, they find me.

Third, when we trade just to make money we tend to sell our winners too soon. We want to lock in that good feeling of making a profit and don't want to ever feel the frustration of having a winner turn in to a loser. So, we exit the stock when it feels good or at the first sign that the trade might make us feel bad. This causes us to not ride out the inevitable pull backs along a longer term trend.

Finally, focusing on the money causes us to now manage risk ineffectively. When we think about how much we "could" make if the stock goes up then we might buy a position larger than we are willing to lose. By taking too much risk, we are more likely to not sell our losers when they reach a sell signal or exit our winners too soon because of the fear that the winner will turn in to a loser.

Rather than focus on money when you trade, I want you to focus on being right. Do your analysis on a stock and then ask, "am I right to buy this stock?" "Am I right to short sell this stock?"

Make your trading an intellectual exercise, a challenge to your brain to be right more than you are wrong. Take your focus off of the green and on to the black and white. The easiest way to do this is to only look at the charts and not look at your account's profit and loss indicator. I strongly believe that if you focus on making the right decision instead of focusing on making money, you will end up making more of it anyway.

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The market is breaking through some important short term support today which means it is likely setting up for a pull back through the remainder of September. This does not mean an end to the upward trend, the market looks to only be working on a pull back to the long term upward trend line. This is a healthy process which recharges buyer interest. I recommend staying on the sidelines with short term trades right now, or trade the pull back through inverse ETFs or the VXX and its related ETFs.

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1. SPY

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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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