Free Foundation email newsletter

9 Tactics to be a Better Trader - Stockscores Perspectives for July 1

9 Tactics to be a Better Trader - Stockscores Perspectives for July 1
Stockscores Foundation for the week ending July 1, 2024

In this week's issue:




In This Week’s Issue:

  • Market Outlook – Is a Summer Rally Coming?
  • This Week’s Market Minutes video – GME and NVDA, Is It Time to Buy?
  • Trader Training – 9 Tactics to be a Better Trader
  • Strategy – Pullback Play

 

Market Outlook – Is a Summer Rally Coming?

Most years, we get a period of gains in the summer, which has been creatively called the summer rally. Last year, it started mid-June and went for a month. No strength so far this year but the broader market started to show some strength last week. I expect that a move to the upside will depend on the market starting to expect an interest rate reduction from the US Fed. Watching the US Treasury Bond market ETF (TBT) for a move to the upside is a good way to see what the market anticipates from the US Central Bank. Strength in the IWM is a good indication of broader market strength, unlike strength in the S&P500 or Nasdaq 100 which have been pulled higher by the strength in a small number of very large cap tech stocks.

 

This Week’s Market Minutes Video – GME and NVDA, Is It Time to Buy?

Is it time to buy GME (Gamestop) or NVDA (Nvidia)? They are two high profile stocks that attract a lot of retail trading interest, but with recent weakness, many are concerned that they are more likely to go down than up. This week, I provide my analysis of these stocks and show what to watch for in the days and weeks ahead. Plus, my analysis of the stock, commodity, crypto and bond markets before the trade of the week on ASNS.

Click here to watch this week's video

https://youtu.be/inNIr73waK8

 

Commentary – 9 Tactics to be a Better Trader

Here is a list of priorities that I think are essential to becoming a successful stock trader:

Find Alpha. These are the stocks that are moving on their own story, with less correlation to the overall market. There will be a different list of Alpha stocks every day but they are characterized by abnormal price and volume activity. These attract the crowd, the crowd brings the emotion, emotion causes a break down in market efficiency and that creates opportunity.

Overcome Yourself. Humans are predisposed to fail in the stock market because we have an emotional attachment to money. That clouds our judgment and makes us do irrational things. Computers have been programmed to take advantage of those emotions. To be successful, you have to learn to overcome yourself.

Trade Positive Expected Value. Your trading strategy should be based on logic based rules that can be tested over a large sample size. That testing should show that the strategy makes money consistently through varied market conditions. Just as the odds favor the casino, your strategy should have odds that favor you. Otherwise, you are just the gambler on the wrong side of the table.

Define Your Process. A great strategy is useless if you don’t have the process in place to find and execute the trades before the opportunity is gone. It is not about buying or shorting the right stock. It is about buying or shorting the right stock at the right time. With a sound process, even the best strategy will fail.

Have Optimism. You are what you think. If you are negative then you will get negative results. With optimism, you can overcome the hard times and find your path to trading success. Optimism does not mean recklessness, for that is the way of the gambler who seeks fast riches without the hard work.

Work Hard. Once your trading strategy is defined and your emotions under control, trading is not that difficult. However, getting to that point takes hard work, discipline and perseverance. Many aspiring traders fail because they give up.

Focus. The market can change direction very quickly. If you are not focused, you can miss opportunities or quickly watch a good trade turn in to a bad one. When you are trading, trade.

Have a Plan. Without a well thought out and tested trading plan, you will succumb to your emotions when trading gets difficult. The plan should be concise enough for a computer to follow. Don’t leave room for judgment because your judgment will be clouded when you risk your capital.

Have an Edge. You are competing against millions of other traders. To win, you have to have an edge. That could be better information, a better strategy, better technology, better emotional control or anything else you can find that most people don’t have.

Trade well.

Back To Top



This week, I ran the Stockscores Pullback Play strategy market scan. This strategy looks for stocks that are in an upward trend but have pulled back to the trend line and are now breaking the pullback. I visually inspect the charts to find stocks making this pattern, here are two that look promising



1. SGHT
SGHT has been trending higher for the past few months but pulled back through June to come back to its daily upward trend line. This week, it started to move up, breaking the pullback. Support at $5.90.

Back To Top

2. HSHP
HSHP has been in an upward trend since November of last year and is breaking a pullback to the upward trend line now. Stock has been paying a dividend that gives it an historical yield of 5.66%.

Back To Top


If you wish to unsubscribe from the Stockscores Foundation newsletter or change the format of email you are receiving please login to your Stockscores account. Copyright Stockscores Analytics Corp.

References

Disclaimer
This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Foundation 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 this newsletter 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.

Back To Top