Trading Lesson of the Week

Check back weekly for another free trading lesson:

Are Your Trades Using Capital Effectively?

In This Week’s Issue:

  • Market Outlook – NVDA and Friends Sucking Cash Away from Small Cap
  • This Week’s Market Minutes video – Is NVDA a Stock Bubble About to Burst?
  • Trader Training – Are Your Trades Using Capital Effectively?
  • Strategy – Momentum Breaks

Market Outlook – Tec

Action in the small cap stocks has slowed while money seems to be chasing the large cap stocks with exposure to Artificial Intelligence. Of course, the leader of this group is NVDA which continues to stretch to new highs, it s a good hold for now but entry at these levels is risky, better to wait for a pullback. While overall activity in the small caps is less than it was two months ago, there is still action in stocks that are behaving abnormally. The key is to look for the stocks that are trading with abnormal volume, strong liquidity and making good price moves to the upside. Trade these on breaks of pullbacks, don’t chase parabolic trends.

This Week’s Market Minutes Video – Is NVDA a Stock Bubble About to Burst?

Strong gains in stocks like NVDA have many concerned that it is a bubble ready to burst. This week, I discuss what a bursting bubble stock looks like and how to know when to get out. Plus, I provide my regular market analysis and a look at the trade of the week on RANI.

Click Here to Watch on YouTube

https://youtu.be/YIPX_P7Q97o

 

Commentary – Are Your Trades Using Capital Effectively?

A Stockscores user asked me a question that I think many people have, "If you have more trade opportunities than capital, how do you pick which trades to take?"

The short and simple answer is to take the trades that give you the most bang for your buck. Let me explain.

We size our trade positions based on the risk of the trade. The risk of the trade is the difference between the entry price and the stop loss price. Divide the risk in to your risk tolerance amount and you have the number of shares you can buy.

Consider two trade possibilities, each with strong charts that show the same potential for price appreciation. The first has an entry price of $5 with support, and therefore our stop loss point, at $4.50. That means there is $0.50 of downside, or the potential for a 10% drawdown.

The second trade has an entry price of $20 with a $19 support price and stop loss point. On this trade, if wrong, we stand to lose $1 per share or 5% drawdown, since $1/$20 is 5%.

If we are willing to risk $500 on each trade, we will buy 1000 shares of the $5 stock for a total cost of $5,000 and 500 shares of the $20 stock for a total cost of $10,000. Each trade has the same amount of risk but the second trade requires more capital because the stock is less volatile. That also means the expectation for percentage gain on the second position is also less. The price volatility on the entry signal is a good predictor of what price volatility will be in the trend.

Clearly, the first trade gives more bang for the buck. We can use less capital for the same profit potential. We may believe both trades have the potential to make $1000 but the first trade will do it with half as much money invested. For a trader with limited capital, the first trade is the one to take.

Generally, lower priced stocks will be more volatile on a percentage basis, making them a source of greater percentage gain potential. You can place less capital in to a low priced stock to get the same dollar upside as a higher priced stock trade.

I did a quick survey of this week's best gainers to confirm this fact. I ranked the 2000 most actively traded stocks in the US last week by percentage gain and focused on the top 20 gainers. Of the top 20, 17 were under $10. The other 3 were under $20.

The lesson here is to focus on lower priced stocks if you have less capital to trade with. Many will argue that these lower priced stocks are riskier and maybe dangerous for a risk averse trader. They are actually not riskier, they are more volatile. That means you have to take a smaller position size in them so that the risk of the trade does not exceed your risk tolerance.

By adjusting position size based on the difference between the entry price and stop loss price, you can make every stock trade have the same amount of risk. If the stock is volatile buy less. If your amount of capital is insufficient for all the trades you find, focus on the lower priced stocks.

There is one caveat to this style of risk management. Lower priced stocks tend to have an added element of risk because they have a greater potential for price gaps. Lower priced stocks tend to have less established or diversified businesses which means a problem with one of their businesses can have a major impact on share price. It is much easier for a small Biotech stock to gap down 30% on bad news than it is for Pfizer to. That means the low priced stocks you trade could blow through your stop loss point if bad news brings a big price gap.

That makes it important to not put all of your capital in to just a few low priced stocks. If you are going to focus on relatively cheap stocks then you must own a number of them so that a larger than expected loss on one of them does not bring your portfolio performance down significantly.

If you have less capital to trade with than what you would like, focus on the lower priced stocks. You can adjust your Stockscores Market Scans to include a price filter for stocks under $10 or even lower if you like. Just remember to size your positions based on the volatility of the stock, the difference between the entry price and support on the chart, where you will put your loss limit. By doing that, you can match the risk of the trade to your risk tolerance and use less capital to gather the same dollar profit potential.

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