Days Away - Weekend Report

 | Mar 13, 2017 13:52

Originally published by Chamber of Merchants

This weekend report will be broken into sections and mainly revolves around the direction of gold in both US and Australian dollars as well as the direction of gold miners.

There are numerous factors to consider, however I’ll focus on a few to hopefully shed some light on where the market is at.

h2 Merchant’s Trading Insight/h2

Managing risk is only important if a trade goes against you. The only problem is, most traders, especially retail traders like you and me, are programmed to assume that it only applies to “risky stocks”, certainly not the equities that you and I are trading/ investing in. The outcome is usually this: when it does happen to you, it will most likely damage your capital so badly that it would take years of successful trading to make up your losses that potentially could have been avoided with a few smart strategies in place.

And it’s not just “penny dreadfuls” that require risk management.

Remember when BHP Billiton Ltd (AX:BHP) had the dam disaster and halved in value? It could happen to you.

In fact, it would be wise to assume it will happen to you, a few times, over your trading career.

So let us assume that it’s a time bomb and that at some stage, one of the stocks you’ve bought:

  • will be sold short with momentum
  • will go into a trading halt
  • will raise capital and dilute its shares
  • will have bad news of some sort
  • will have bad news in its industry
  • will be sued for something
  • will be under investigation
  • will have a safety incident
  • will have disappointing results
  • will make a cycle low and knock out stops
  • will have a major shareholder exit the stock
  • etc etc etc etc etc etc

How do we manage risk then to ensure we don’t get taken down with the company’s share price?

Concisely:

  • Spread your risk across a few companies
  • Spread your risk across a few sectors ( I hardly every do this)
  • enter at bargain, opportunity and buffer levels
  • Use stop losses at levels that save you from strong support breaks
  • When in doubt, reduce your position size
  • Appreciate cash and the potential options it offers
  • Never marry a stock, no matter what
  • Try to make the most money, in the least amount of time
  • Avoid a conspiracy mindset
  • Banding together with fellow holders for comfort but being blind to price action
  • Not reacting to bad news (“it will be ok” and sinking with the ship. Why trade long in bad news?)
  • Try to avoid stocks that have zero revenue or zero profit
  • Be prepared to take a small loss before it turns into a large, inexcusable loss.
Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now

Heck, there are many other ways to be smart and sustainable in your trading.

These are just a few points for your benefit. Discuss them, use them, don’t use them.

h2 Gold’s Rate Hike Historical Price Action | Timeline Perspective/h2

I thought it prudent to look closer at the only rate hikes that have occurred in the last decade. You’d notice that in both occasions prior, there are bounces and sell offs, before and after the rate hike.