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I am considering the best method to pick the best possible stocks to maximise my profits. Having read "Stan Weinstein's Secrets for Profiting in Bull and Bear Markets," I was intruiged by the Sector selection process he uses. For someone like myself starting out (and looking to hold for a few days to a few weeks) is this a good approach? Consider the strength of each sector and then take trades which show the best technical strength in the sectors which show the best technical strength
Do some reading on Fixed fractional Position sizing
You need to know how to position size a trade.
This will put you on the right track so you will not be over or under exposed.
While I think it's a decent idea in theory, how do you plan to practically adopt this sector approach? Chart based or fundamental based?
Note also that the Australian market is very top heavy. If you look at the sector indices they will be heavily skewed by the few dominate stocks within them.
Financials - Big 4
Insurance - QBE/IAG
Mining - BHP/RIO
REIT - WDC/SGP
Gold - NCM
Consumer - WOW/WES
Healthcare - CSL
Telecom - TLS
Energy - WPL/STO/ORG/OSH
IT - CPU
This may or may not be a hinderance to you assessing whether a sector has strength or not.
Personally I think a fundamental based screen might work better (think rare earth, potash, uranium 12 months back, biotech etc) - although it will most likely put you into the hot sector where hot money can flow in and out very quickly. You wouldn't mind the flowing in part if you get there early enough, but it's the flowing out part that would give you problems.
Are you saying that the heavy weighting in these sectors is unique to the Aussie market? i.e. this isn't the case in the US?
I was going to use technical indicators for the sector charts, but it seems like it might not be worth it if they are to heavily weighted in this way.
I'm really just trying to get some sort of a checklist compiled at the moment. e.g. 1. check the overall market direction/strength 2. Check the sector 3. Check the weekly chart of individual stock to determine what stage and part of EW the individual stock is in. 4. Do the same for the daily chart. (I am looking to hold for a few days to a few weeks)
Something very basic that makes sure I cover all bases while I am a beginner and prone to overlooking very basic things.
I don't know how it is in the US market, but sectors are top heavy in ASX for sure. I haven't read the book you mentioned but there are plenty of books out there that suggest good ideas that cannot be easily implemented in practice.
Tech, I'm uig fixed fractional at the moment.
I guess this is why i was tossing up the idea of CFDs, not to increase my risk greatly but to be able to take more positions. Ideally though I would want to use IB because of the costs which is definitely the way I want to go medium to long term.
Tech, I'm uig fixed fractional at the moment.
If I have a stop loss around 5 or 6% from entry price and am risking $500 per trade (2% of $25,000) then the average position size is approximately $8,000, which would allow me to only hold 3 stocks at a time.
I guess this is why i was tossing up the idea of CFDs, not to increase my risk greatly but to be able to take more positions. Ideally though I would want to use IB because of the costs which is definitely the way I want to go medium to long term.
What are your thoughts on this dilemma?
+1 for skc last post there, that is the good stuff.
I would add:
"Too few positions to trade", is this really a problem? I don't think so. How many positions do you really need?!
Also, do you really need sector analysis or fundamental screens or anything like that? How about:
If you feel the need to mechanise absolutely everything then I like the Relative Strength Index for this job. Instead of filtering based on sector, or fundamentals or whatever: just take the setups as they come. If you approach a day with more setups than you can take, only long the setup with the strongest RSI and only short the setup with the weakest RSI. Which RSI value to use? Depends, are you looking for short term, medium term or long term strength/weakness? A 20 day RSI isn't going to show you how the stock has performed over the last 6 months.
If you don't feel the need to mechanise absolutely everything then just take the setups as they come and use your brain to filter out setups you don't like.
Firstly you need to understand fixed fractional position sizing.
As pointed out the % risked should vary on depending on market and in particular stock performance.
Lastly I use margin at every opportunity and I use IB.
Let's look first at CORRECT Fixed Fractional position sizing.
If stock is $10 and you are risking $500 and your stop is 20 c away from your purchase price then you can buy 2500,
You could maintain your exposure by adding margin---to whatever level your portfolio can stand--- read about Portfolio Heat.I keep mine ( heat ) below 20 %
if a stock is flying I am happy to risk 5 % or more but this will normally be for a short term " Rape and Escape" type trade/s.
The answer to type of method used for stock selection CANNOT be answered without proven test results.To attempt to is just guessing.
Even Wienstien's method is taken on face value --- unless you've tested it and you KNOW your application has positive expectancy over wide and varied markets and Bourses.
Wienstien may not be happy with the result!!!!!
Lastly all methods work brilliantly in bull markets.
Select your method and testing to suit the market--- if you expect all methods to work in ALL markets you'll be continually pulling your hair out and losing your capital by slow bleeding---- if your good----- or gushing wounds---- if your crap.
Thanks for the reply.
I don't want to use fundamental analysis at all for the sectors. I read a bit about Relative Strength in the same book I was reading. This must be different to RSI. It basically says that if XYZ stock rises by 10% but the market average advances by 20% then obviously XYZ is relatively weaker.
It uses the formula: Price of XYZ/Price of Market Average
The example it uses is 50/310 = 0.16
(This is on page 108 for anyone who has the book)
This has confused me. Can you or someone else please explain what relative strength indicators they use and what they mean exactly?
Are you perhaps over-complicating your approach? If you really haven't considered that different stocks will have considerably different risk profiles, then you're surely ignoring something that's absolutely basic.I hadn't considered using different levels of risk for different stocks. I guess this is something for me to look at as I become more experienced in determining what an incredibly strong trading opportunity is.
The point I was making and failing to communicate well was that if say you had a $10 stock with a 10c risk and a $500 Capital allocation you could buy 5000 which is ove your total investment capital.
You an and should use margin to leverage the position.
You are still risking only a the same % as any other trade-- using he same position sizing method.
I trade---currently smalls with a buy price of less than $1 and more than .05 c
This is where the bang for buck is in my view.
Yes, it can be confusing, because despite it's name, RSI has absolutely nothing to do with relative strength. The "traditional method" of calculating relative strength (called the "ratio method" in The Encyclopedia of Technical Market Indicators) is comparing the performance of one security against another. As per your example above, you divide the stock price by the index (or whatever else you want to compare it against) and plot the result as an indicator. If this indicator is rising, it means the stock is outperforming the index. If the line is falling, it's underperforming the index.
This book also talks about the "screening method" (which is basicly what I do), which runs an exploration over the entire universe of stocks and ranks them from best to worst performer. William O'Neil uses this type of method in his book.
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