"Taking it one day at a time because there is nothing better to do than living in the present."

Friday, January 29, 2010

AAPL Closed Trade...

I closed my vertical spread on AAPL with a profit of $199+change. I think I was lucky to call this trade so perfectly.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

AAPL Topped...

AAPL has been hitting record highs in previous weeks, however yesterday price action for the stock was bearish. For instance the peak never reached the resistance of $215. Instead the price went back down to end just below $206.


The chart marked in green are the two occasions where price reached the resistance $215. Yesterday's price was a sign that prices would go lower because it was a lower high. Although Apple will probably announce their latest and greatest product today, the peak in the prices have topped. If we close below $198 in the week to follow then further weaknesses are in store. Presently I sold a vertical call spread in the stock and do not expect stock price to reach $220 by February expiration.

Anything is still possible, but odds are in my favor that prices remain below $220 mainly because of the strong $215 resistance. Even yesterday's significantly higher volume was unable to crack the price level.

Monday, January 25, 2010

BIDU picking the top

Its been a week since BIDU's crash back to near 400s. The initial drop in BIDU began three days after the gap up. There was an immediate gap down on day four and I scalp the trade for a small gain. (A very similar trend happened in AAPL, it was day four after its initial gap up did the stock go up. I find it very interesting.)


I was unable to capitalize on such simple move down on the stock because most of my capital was settled in, Goldman Sachs, GS options. I was on the wrong side of the GS trade and got whack pretty hard. I had 175 Feb10 calls at 5.10 and sold them for about 1.95. I also purchased call vertical spreads that total my lost to nearly $5,000.

I held the GS's calls until they reported their 4th quarter '09 earnings, and as trend was a tall tale sign, the stock dropped like a rock that day. (JPM and INTC both had positive earning reports for the 4th quarter, but their stocks dropped after the announcing their respective reports.) I closed all the calls I had on GS and turned bearish immediately.

My emotions took the best of me in the GS trade. I broke many rules that I tried to enforce. First was to control my lost, which I was unable to do because the day GS open to trade right after earnings the stock price fell within minutes. My asking prices had to be changed every few seconds but I was unable to catch any bids. Out of desperation to get out of the trade I went with market order. I should had set a trail stop on the trade to control my loses. This trade was just dread awful. Still I cannot dwell on the mistake, instead I must repeat to myself to learn from this and move on.

Another reason why I know it was a bad trade was because the day I purchased the GS calls I wanted to recoup loses I had in my GLD strangle spread. Arrogance got the best of me because my calls never got a positive gain after the day I purchased them. After my consecutive loses in YGE and GLD I should have walked away from trading for the week or at least control my amount of capital to trade so that I would not again, yes again, fall off a cliff. (Metaphorically speaking of my capital.) Foolish me.

Furthermore not only did I lose capital in hold the GS options I lost the opportunity to gain some impressive capital if I could have shorted BIDU. One mistake automatically leads to another. A chain of events that clearly were all hurting me.

There is a bright spot to this. I was able to flip bearish right as I left my GS options and used whatever capital I had to shorting the market and have recoup almost 2/3 of all my loses in the GS options. I also felt comfortable with my shorts when I executed them, which I did not have as much as when I purchased the GS options. I should take note of my comfort levels in certain trades. Until next time, G.L.T.A. in trading.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Picking a Top

Today I post a few charts on a trade I am prepared to put a position on. To short the stock BIDU.

Before I just go short the stock I went and did some research. I wanted to avoid as much technical analysis jargon as possible and apply a simple chart pattern. The pattern I am looking for is a daily upward gap followed by a second up day. There were two stocks that had similar upward gaps on a intraday chart that I have followed for quite some time. The charts are AAPL, Apple and AMZN, Amazon.


The day AMZN gaped up was the day they posted earnings. The following day the stock manage to gain even more. Considering the first day gap was a new high for the stock I am betting that the second day rally was due partly by shorts covering. Although there was a sense of optimism in AMZN for blowing out expectations so there were also significant buyers. The days after the stock consolidated AMZN still dropped about $5 in the consolidation. A good time to short the stock was on the third day after the gap day.

In AAPL on October 19, 2009 the stock spiked at the open. It ended the day closing lower but the following day it again increased at the open. The stock ended on the second day at pike high. The third day the stock was neutral and then declined on the fourth day. The decline was pretty dramatic, over $10 drop in a week. Again it looks like a lot of shorts getting squeeze on the second day after the upward gap. What is interesting to note is that Oct. 19 was a Wednesday and option expiration was on the 21st. 21st was actually a neutral day for AAPL, it ended without gaining much.

As I write this post BIDU is at a 52 week high which is dangerous for people who are shorting. The main reason is because when a stock has past its previous highs there are very few traders that can preciously judge how far higher the stock can go. (Trying to pick the top is very difficult.) Furthermore traders who have been shorting the stock at its former high may begin unloading their position to avoid heavy losses. For the past two days a similar pattern has occur in BIDU as in AAPL. The first day BIDU opened with a huge gap on Wednesday of options expiration week. The stock price ended lower than where it gaped at the open. However a continuation upward trend continued on the second day. Presently the stock is up 5%+ at about $463 and change. Over 80 points swing in two days, impressive.

Due to such an impressive run I do not plan to play any Jan10 options. The stock just has to much of a upward momentum. To be safer I am concentrating on deep in the money put options with Feb10 expiration. If chart pattern in BIDU is similar to AAPL than I expect BIDU to consolidate downward in the week to follow. Will check back on this prediction.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Big down day for me....

I should had left my GLD straddle position last Friday but did not. Today gold prices increased in dramatic fashion and I took a major hit. At the close of my Jan10 107 straddle I lost $275.5 including commissions. Talk about not surpassing my stop losses for the month. A major blow, indeed.

I am unable to time the market right presently. The internal market conditions are bullish but stocks that I am in are getting whacked. One note to add today is YGE shooting over $18.00 as shown in graph below. Thank god I did not stick around to see the pop up. That would have tacked on at least another $100 loss if I had stayed in my sold puts.

Another example that trend is your friend when you follow it. Clearly my losses were directly on the opposite side of trends. For now I am long financial stocks due to last week's up trend and will be picking at specific institutions. I am not going against the trend....

Friday, January 8, 2010

First losses of 2010

For the total loss in trade including commission, $176. I had purchased 5 veritcal Jan10 puts @ 17.5/19 at $0.90 each but the stock did not decline enough for me to profit on. I held the options for a couple of days anticipating on a further downward decline after significant gains. Instead today was the day where it shot up slightly over 1% in a matter of minutes. YGE held strong at the $17.85 and went up on strong volume. As shown in the white diagonal line in the volume section below.


It was clear to me yesterday the trade was a big mistake but I held it overnight because of two reasons. Sentiment for the broader market was neutral to bearish and the five day moving average for YGE was flat. I knew I was making a gamble, all choices in life are gambles in my opinion because as long as there is a probability between winning and losing it is gambling, and anticipated on a breakdown today. YGE at first looked weak but the broader market shot up in a matter of moments, especially the Nasdaq. Then YGE gained momentum and it was difficult for me to get out of the trade due probably to the small market cap of the stock. I lost about 39% of my total trade investment.

Next time I will probably watch for moving averages to actually decline before I go bearish. Furthermore I should purchase less option spreads on small cap stocks due to lack of liquidity.
Clearly the market is on a neutral to upward trend right now so any bearishness I have to stocks should be at a minimum.

Patience is key and I remember another trade blogger saying that, cash itself is a position. Rather than holding stocks and options overnight I should also hold more cash overnight to avoid big swings in the market. I have a gut felling that even if the market does not look like it will go down, but when it does it will be a downward cliff. Why? The trade volume for the past week is lighter than usual so bulls do not have conviction in the upward push. Yet, "price is the only thing that matters."- Brian Shannon of Alphatrends.net

I have an aspiration to not loss over $3000 this year, therefore each month not to go over $250. I know its highly impossible and I should not have such an aggressive stance on losses. However with this restriction I force myself psychologically to think twice before I make a trade. In essence scrutinize my trades a lot more than usual in order to give myself better odds in profiting.

I am also in another losing position presently, a sale of a GLD Jan10 straddle 107 and the position presently has a $35 loss including commissions. I plan to buy it back without a lost but will have to wait. Good for me is that the five day moving average has finally turned downward on GLD. Will update on this position.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Timing it Right.... I did not...


I purchased a NDX vertical-(1875/1900) put yesterday at $12.30 and sold it today at $13.85, a little to early. As the chart above shows there was a significant drop after where I sold. Market indicators at the time had techs continue to drop, but because financial companies and airlines were going up so I felt a turn to the upside was around the corner. Indeed the market pulled up around 10:30. Yet I should have let the momentum of the trend push me out of the trade versus my own instincts. The reason is because right after I sold the spread, two minutes later it was marked around $14.80. The spread peak was around $15.50 and that was easy money I did not pick up.

On the other hand it is always better to wish I had more gains than to accept a significant lost. Right now I am getting wacked on my YGE puts spread and feel I need to close them today. Not sure yet.

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Mistake after mistake after mistake

I was hoping to start off the new year on a winning streak and at least end the year 2010 in the positive. In any case I went long GOOG options yesterday right before Google was to have their presentation to unveil the Nexus One. A couple of hours after I executed my trade I was already up over 15% but not expecting what would happen next I kept the options as the stock tumbled.


This is not my first trade of the year but I am posting it to remind myself how fortunate I was in this trade. What happened today was GOOG stock tumbling over $15. I had Jan10 630 call options and luckily I sold all of them right at today's open, which GOOG started off up $1. I did not even have the mentality to short GOOG after I exited the trade even though I knew full well the stock was breaking supports left and right. The reason for not shorting was because I was shell shock to have escape my call trade with a profit.

The technical indicators had the stock lower however I kept the call options overnight which was a major mistake. I knew the stock was getting weak but did not anticipate on a $15+ downward day for the stock on a otherwise subdued trading ranging for the overall indexes. Next time I will make sure not to flip back and forth between going short and long on GOOG and instead stick to my original plan. My original plan was to buy Puts which I did but sold one day after for a measly gain and went long on the same day. I had studied the pattern that GOOG's upward short term trend was slowing and anticipated on a drop, just timed it way off.

On a side note around 3pm I bought a NDX vertical put anticipating on accelerated drop in the NASDAQ due to major tech stocks such as AAPL, AMZN, RIMM, IBM, INTC, & GOOG all were looking to accelerate downward. That I am making a profit on and will probably close out the position tomorrow morning to avoid any positive push Friday's unemployment numbers may bring to the market.

Taking it one day at a time because there is nothing better to do than living in the present.

Disclaimer

All information in this blog are not to be used as investments by anyone. It is shown only to record my own experiences in the markets. I am not responsible for any lose, pain, anguish, or death you may have from following my trades. Therefore I polity warn all readers to use this site's information at their own discretion.