CanOz
Home runs feel good, but base hits pay bills!
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- 11 July 2006
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I had a similar problem when I started swing trading ASX stocks, thinking I could trail shorts the same as longs on a nice decline.
While you may see the occasional chart which looks like this (low volatility decline) generally I've found the most reliable short returns are only 1-2 days after an up (or at least consolidation) day when looking for downtrend swings.
Basically fade pops on the first sign of intraday weakness and cover or trail very tight into long SL levels.
I was reading today a paper on short interest in (all U.S) stocks and it indicated that the consistent monthly returns to short side generally only come from small (> micro < large) stocks with large short interest ratio, and it's only the highest 1% (~50-60 out of ~5000) of short interest weighted equally which can give this kind of performance. So it seems better (in general) to look for mean reversion to provide short returns in stocks with the trend as a bias/preference mechanism.
Thread requested by SKC to discuss shorting spikes in Equities....
Cheers,
CanOz
Well that didn't work out too well. Closed at $3.21
I always trade badly when I think I can ride this for months all the way down to $2. May be I'd learn one day.
I had a similar problem when I started swing trading ASX stocks, thinking I could trail shorts the same as longs on a nice decline.
While you may see the occasional chart which looks like this (low volatility decline) generally I've found the most reliable short returns are only 1-2 days after an up (or at least consolidation) day when looking for downtrend swings.
Basically fade pops on the first sign of intraday weakness and cover or trail very tight into long SL levels.
I was reading today a paper on short interest in (all U.S) stocks and it indicated that the consistent monthly returns to short side generally only come from small (> micro < large) stocks with large short interest ratio, and it's only the highest 1% (~50-60 out of ~5000) of short interest weighted equally which can give this kind of performance. So it seems better (in general) to look for mean reversion to provide short returns in stocks with the trend as a bias/preference mechanism.