Thursday, December 31, 2009

December 2009 Trading

December represented a significant improvement over the last few months. It was the third highest month yet for realized gains (best since July) and percentage yield (10.45%, just one basis point behind the second highest month).

I sold the following:
  • FPL Group, Inc
  • Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc
  • Exelon Corp
  • Owens and Minor, Inc.
At the end of the month, I'm still about 30% invested, which is pretty good considering that I rolled a rather large CD into my investable funds. So there's still a lot of upside with these existing holdings. I'm currently invested in the following:
  • Lockheed Martin Corp - Up 3.0% - I've now held some of these shares for almost 5 months.
  • Nokia - Down 2.0% - small holding, but I've not been inclined to double-up because of the beating that it's been taking from Apple and RIM.
  • Buckle, Inc - Up 9.3% - Almost met my sell price a few times. Hopefully this will go over the top in the next few days. And if not, it goes ex-div in mid-January.
  • Exxon Mobil Corp - No gain - Been up and down, ex-div in mid-February.

This is the largest dividend collection month to date with about 1/6th of the realized gain coming from dividends! I collected dividends on the following:

  • Exelon Corp
  • FPL Group, Inc
  • Owens and Minor, Inc.
  • Lockheed Martin Corp

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Back On Track!

Whew, I was a bit worried after such a slow month in November, but I've sold stock on each of the first three days of December plus made a new purchase today. December already promises to be the best month for realized gains since July and the yield is running about 10%. I'm still holding about 40% of available cash in stocks, so there's plenty of upside from here too.

Monday, November 30, 2009

November 2009 Trading (or lack of)

Well, I'm hopeful that this will be be my worse month...ever!

I made no sales all month and collected no dividends, thus realized no gains. I had several opportunities where I was over the 90 percentile toward my sell price, but I held off. But I had several buying opportunities that I took advantage of during the month and the current unrealized gains are pretty good...although they were better at the start of last week. And I have several stocks that went ex-dividend in November or early December, so I will have something to show next month when the dividends are paid.

I'm also 54% invested at this time (based on October 31st available funds). I'm in the process of transferring a maturing IRA CD into the pool, so the funds for investing are growing.

At the end of the month, I'm invested in:
  • Lockheed Martin Corp - Up 5.6%. Since this stock was down 5.9% at the end of October, this has had more than 10% swing. This goes ex-div on December 1st, and will represent a fairly decent dividend payment at the end of December.
  • Public Service Enterprise Group, Inc - Up 4.1%
  • Nokia - Up 1.1%
  • Owens and Minor, Inc. - Down 4.4%. This one has been a bit of a roller coaster.
  • Exelon Corp - Up 4.2% - Went ex-div in November.
  • FPL Group, Inc - Up 6.7% - Went ex-div in November. This has been very close to the sell price several times. Hopefully there will be a little nudge to put it over the top in the next few days.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

October 2009 Trading

Unfortunately, October set a new low for realized gains, although it was only slightly lower than September. Yields were also down a bit, but still at about 8%. The bad news is that I'm holding some unrealized loss. This is concerning, but not anything that I haven't seen before. Fortunately I'm only 35% invested, so I anticipate there will be buy-in opportunities at low prices on the horizon.

In October I sold the following:

  • McGraw Hill Publishing
  • Exxon Mobil Corp
  • Eli Lily and Company

At the end of the month, I'm invested in:

  • Lockheed Martin Corp - Down 5.9%. I was up 5.2% at the end of September, but didn't sell! Another demonstration of the wages of greed. This represents about 75% of my current holdings and about 25% if my available funds. Also, I've been holding some of these stocks for nearly 3 months, the longest holding period to date.
  • Public Service Enterprise Group Inc - Down 1.1%
  • Nokia - Down 3.9%
  • Owens and Minor, Inc. - Up 2.2%. This purchase was made at a discount after a bad earnings announcement, and the stock partially recovered after I bought in. Hopefully not a dead-cat bounce.

No dividends were collected this month

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Dow 10,000

The big news in the Market yesterday is that the Dow returned to the land of 5 digits. The surge of recent months has been generally concerning as there have been few buying opportunities. And of course, if the market stays bullish and roars to 12,000, those opportunities will continue to be sparse. So that remains a concern.

However, there was a lot of commentary about the event yesterday and I was quite pleased to hear all the pundits be quite wishy washy on the subject, so hopefully some volatility is still forthcoming. I was especially pleased to hear that the the 10,000 threshold has been crossed about 50 times (on closings) since the original passage in October of 1999. So I take this as a good sign that the roller coaster may continue. I'm less than 20% invested at the moment, so I sure hope so!

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Metrics

Listed below are several Metrics related to my trading to date. As has been previous discussed, yields and holding periods have risen in recent months. Monthly investments and gains have been reduced, but the ultimate result has been an ongoing increase in overall funds. Although this is somewhat overstated due to an IRA CD that matured and was transferred into my investment funds in September. I also expect this to recur in the coming months as I have several IRA CDs maturing. Although I do have some hesitation since I haven't been fully invested recently.













Thursday, October 1, 2009

Another Tweak to the Strategy

During August and September, ideal buying opportunities were few and far between. So, I was forced to adapt my strategy or stay out of the market altogether. So I've actually broken up my by criteria into three different groups and split up my available funds accordingly. The breakdown is:
  • Buy in above my established buy price - 25% of funds
  • Buy in at established buy price - 50% of funds
  • Buy in at bargain prices below my established buy price - 25% of funds

This gives me a viable strategy for most markets:

  • Bull Market - I will buy in at higher prices than I typically would, but I would have a maximum of 25% exposure and I would continue to gain some thin profits as long as the market stays positive.
  • Up and down market - I would buy in at 25% and a high price and up to 50% at my standard price. I would then invest a maximum of 75% and receive my expected profit for most of these purchases, but some would be thin profits.
  • Bear Market - I would continue to buy in as the market slides below my target price range and get bargain prices on 25% of my investments, while 50% would be bought at standard price and 25% would be bought at premium price. On average, I would get my standard profit on 100% of my funds although this might require and extended holding period. But since I'm averaging 8% profit on each flip, this is a respectable return, even if the bear market would last a full year. Plus, dividend income would be significant during a long holding period.
  • Flat Market - As noted in previous post, volatility is important for my strategy. So a totally flat market offers few buying or selling opportunities, so this would be a bad scenario if I'm minimally invested. But even this would be acceptable if I'm able to collect dividends on invested funds.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

September 2009 Trading

September was another slow month. Gains were lower than prior months and margins held fairly strong averaging 10.5 %.

I sold the following:
  • Boeing
  • Abbott Labs
  • Dominion Resources
At the end of the month, I'm only about 23% invested with holdings in the following:
  • Lockheed Martin Corp - Up 5.2%
  • Eli Lily and Company - Up 1.6%
  • Mcgraw Hill Publishing - Up 3.9%

I collected dividends on the following:

  • Boeing
  • Lockheed Martin Corp

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Trading Tools

I've recently added a new tool to my trading toolkit that has made my trading life a lot easier and has also made buying opportunities a lot easier to track. I've started using Google Docs spreadsheets along with the Google Finance Function. This allows me to track real time prices and other stock attributes without having to manually transfer to an excel spreadsheet. This is awesome! Also, it makes it much easier to track my holdings across multiple PCs at home and office. But it's not all positive, there are a lot of stock attributes that I must still manually research and place in the spreadsheet, but I'm hopeful that this functionality will expand over time.

Here's a summary of the tools that I use now
  • Google Docs / Google Finance - Online tracking spreadsheet with live price, eps and p/e updates.
  • Yahoo Finance - Tracking other stock attributes like dividends amounts, ex-div dates, target prices, analyst recommendations. Also general financial news.
  • Batstrading - Real time info about outstanding orders and real time trades.
  • Nasdaq - For monitoring pre and post marking trades.
  • Yahoo Stock Screener - Identifying new stocks for monitoring.
  • MSN Stock Screener - Identifying new stocks for monitoring.
  • Firstrade - Brokerage services.
  • Blogger - This financial blog.

Monday, August 31, 2009

August 2009 Trading

Well, unfortunately, August was my slowest month of trading to date. I realized my least gain to date and was invested less than any past month. But on the positive side, my margins were great. earning 13.2% on the investments that I was able to make.

I sold the following holdings:
  • Boeing
  • Corus Entertainment (Class B) - Held for 64 days, my longest holding to date.

At the end of the month, I held the following and am less than 15% invested. Gotta get a bigger stake to increase my gains, but not comfortable at the current price levels:

  • Lockheed Martin Corp - Even
  • Eli Lily and Company - Up 2.9%
  • Abbott Labs - Up 3.8%

I received dividends on the following:

  • Corus Entertainment (Class B)

Friday, August 28, 2009

Cruel Fate

Last Tuesday, August 18th, the market began the first of eight consecutive days of gains in the Dow. Unfortunately, I was severely underinvested at that time, so I haven't been able to participate much. Also on August 8th, I began a 14 day course of antibiotics, so during this same period I've not been able to participate in some significant revelry with my friends.

I've watched Telecom Systems surge past $9 a share, while I sold it for the last three months in the low $7's. And I've seen a blues band, watching my friends enjoy a few beers while I had water. I saw Boeing surge 8% in one day, peaking (so far) at $10 more than I sold it at earlier this month and I hosted a party, serving everyone but myself Belgium beer, bloody mary's and bourbon. I've also passed up several after work happy hours and watched most of my target stocks top their 2009 highs while I didn't own them.

Wow, talk about missing the boat! The good news is that my antibiotics end next Tuesday, so I look forward to great buying opportunities starting then. We'll see.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Slooooow Month

Well, it looks like August is going to be the first month where I've failed to achieve my income goals. With only 6 training days left, I've only made one sale (although for a nice 14% yield) and my holdings are less than 20% of my available funds.

Given the state of the market, it looks possible that I might be able to sell out of my current holdings and perhaps meet my income mark, but buying opportunities are very rare, so I'm not very well positioned for September either. I'll be very surprised if there is good news to report at the end of the month. :-(

But the good news is that I've exceeded my expected yields in past months, so I'm far ahead of my previous buy and hold strategy. Also, I've been working since late June, so this income is not needed to replace lost salary income.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

July 2009 Trading

As mentioned in a previous post, July set a new standard for realized gain! Here are the results!
I sold the following stocks in June. I've been holding stocks longer, but realizing more gain. In all cases, return was greater than 7%, and three sales were over 10%:
  • Hillenbrand Inc.
  • VF Corp - Second time around for this stock
  • Emerson Electric Co
  • Waste Management - Also second time holding this
  • Home Depot
  • Teleflex Inc
  • Telecommunications Systems - A third month in a row that I bought and sold TSYS. This time with a 15.3% gain! The best gain yet for any sale.
  • ADP - Second time
  • Sysco Corp
  • Chevron Corp

At the end of July, I'm holding the following:

  • Corus Entertainment (Class B) - up 7.5%. First time I've carried a stock over for two months. But the setback related to this is documented in an earlier posting.
  • Boeing - Up 9%

I collected July dividends on the following:

  • Corus Entertainment (Class B)

Thursday, July 30, 2009

A New Record!

With the sale of Sysco today, a new high has been established for monthly recognized revenue. And there is still a strong possibility that 2 of the 3 stocks that I'm currently holding will also hit their buy mark before the end of the month. So the new standard might be quite lofty indeed. It's worth noting that this was largely attained through more patient selling for higher margins as I have not held as much during July as in June, yet revenue was greater. So in fact I've had less risk but greater return. Wait a minute, I didn't think that was possible!?

Unfortunately, I'm less than 20% invested at the moment, so it's time to begin the process of patiently waiting for the next buy opportunity. I'll have to fight the urge to jump in prematurely. Past experience has shown me that it's worth the wait for both buying and selling.

Friday, July 24, 2009

A Nice Run Up....

The last week have seen a nice run-up of the market. I've been able to dispose of several holdings at a nice yield including a couple of 10% gains. I'm also approaching my sell point for several other stocks. I even found a brief buying opportunity that I was able to capitalize on. So I've made my target profit for the month and then some. At this writing, my monthly yield is the best to date.

The analysts have been reporting very rosy outlooks recently including some reports of new market highs. As discussed in the past, I prefer volatility over a quick run-up, so I'm hoping that this doesn't happen too quickly....if it happens at all!

I'm down to 40% invested, so I'm hoping to take profits on a few more stocks, then look forward to a correction next week so I can buy back in. The ride continues to be fun!

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

A Very Mixed Day

Wow, today was a very good day for the market. All the broad indices were up about 3% and my portfolio was up a similar amount while I was still about 65% invested. I even sold one holding to realize a tidy 9%.

But I also felt my first real pain. Corus Entertainment had a bad earnings report and I saw a stock that I bought for $13 fall from $12 to $10.25 in minutes! Although they had a bad report, there was no dividend cut or any other news that had long term ramifications, so I didn't even consider bailing out. I briefly considered doubling up at the bottom, but I just wasn't comfortable throwing more money in either. Too bad, because Corus was up to $12 again by the end of the day. I'm still holding a loss, but it's not insurmountable, so I'm holding on and collecting monthly dividends in the short term.

This was also a really good lesson in diversification. When the price was plummeting, I realized that even if the Corus price went to zero, my overall trading portfolio would still be ahead for the last two months. This would not have been the case if I doubled up and the price went to zero.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Ouch!

This week has been brutal so far! The market has been down about 2% for each of the last two days. I've continued to buy in at my price points, but the continued drop has left me with more unrealized loss than I've carried to date. Overall, I'm down about 2% on the shares that I'm holding and almost 4% on a couple of stocks. But this is more than offset by the realized gain that I have for the past two months.

The good news is that I've hit many buy price points in the last two days and I've been able to load-up a bit. But I haven't exhasted all my funds and I'm still only about 60% invested. But this will surely change if the market continues the current spiral.

Conventional day-trading wisdom might call for some stop-loss trades to bail out of my current positions, but I remain resolute that I've purchased good companies at fair prices and I plan to hold on. I remain confident that this will prove to be a good time to buy in whether I'm able to sell out my positions in a few weeks or if I'm required to hold these positions for months or years (noting that I will collect dividends during this period).

The only trading change that I'm considering is avoiding or minimizing any speculative trades. Under any circumstances, this is a minor piece of my portfolio, but I'm leaning even more toward conservatism at the moment....but we'll see what happens when I hit my price point on one of my speculative stocks!

"Earning's Season" looms. We'll see how it goes and if I stay in the red or get back in the black.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

June 2009 Trading

June was a great month with almost twice as much realized gain as May with earnings matching my gross salary. Given the tax sheltered approach, I feel I'm way ahead of my net earnings as a working stiff. Although the holdings are nearly depleted, I have high hopes for a similar performance in July.

I sold the following stocks in June. In all cases, return was greater than 5%:
  • Kimberly Clark
  • CMS Energy
  • Chubb Corp
  • Abbott Labs
  • Clorox
  • Pfizer - Second batch of Pfizer bought and sold in June after a similar cycle in May.
  • Merck
  • Telecommunications Systems - Also a second batch for TSYS. This falls into my non-standard strategy.
At the end of June, I'm holding:
  • ADP
  • Emerson Electric Co
  • Corus Entertainment (Class B)
  • Hillenbrand Inc.

No dividends were collected in June.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Do Be Greedy

Well, so far I've learned that there's a direct relationship between the amount I've invested and the return I've earned. Given the funds that I have set aside for this purpose, I've only been 55% invested at a maximum since I've started this exercise. And on average, I'd say I'm usually about 25% invested. This is mostly by design as I've wanted to make sure that I have funds on hand in case the market has a precipitous drop that presents a great buying opportunity. But this also means that I've had a lot of cash sitting idle at any given point of time.

I'm going to make a slight tweak to my strategy. I've established a standard "ante" which I use to buy-in to a given stock. Assuming I guy in at the perfect time, I do not buy any more of the stock and later sell at a nice profit. But there are also occasions when I double-up or perhaps even triple-up my investment if the price drops further and the stock remains attractive. Of course, I sometimes deviate from the standard amount depending on my comfort level for the given stock. For example, I use a much smaller lot sizes for my "spice up" investments given their higher risk.

The tweak I am making is to increase the standard "ante" investment by 20%. This should increase my percentage of invested funds and decrease my already-low expense ratio.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Don't Be Greedy

This morning, the market was surging upward without hesitation. I had a sell price set on a certain security, but didn't want to leave money on the table, so I bumped the sell price up a bit. As you might guess, my initial sell price was surpassed, but my revised sell point was not reached, so I did not sell. Then the market plunged. So I still have my position despite my established sell price being reached.

Selling too early is always a bit disappointing as the price continues to rise after you've sold out. But not selling at all is much worse. So hold to your price!!

Trading Spice Up

I've been trading for almost two months and things are starting to get a little bit boring using my defined strategy. Don't get me wrong, I'm meeting my financial objectives, but it quite boring and there are long lapses of activity while waiting for buy or sell triggers to be met.

Given this, I've decided to "officially" amend my strategy to include a more speculative component. I actual started this in May by buying into TSYS (Telecommunications Systems), then closing out my position when I realized that I was not adhering to my stated strategy. I've seen several interesting opportunities pass me by (TSYS, RIM, ETFC) in the interim and have decided to take advantage of these in a modest way.

As with my main strategy, I've tried to establish a few rules:
  1. Speculative stock should be limited to less than $10,000 in total.
  2. Stop Loss limits may be utilized as appropriate as I do not wish to hold these for the long term in the event of a downturn.
  3. No real selection criteria at this point, but obviously there should be some indicator that the stock represents a good value and has good prospects for the immediate future.

I'm interested to see if this leads to other bad habits!

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Real Life Case Study in Company Specific Risk

Last week I removed the first company from my "watch list". Barnes Group reduced it's revenue guidance to the point where they no longer met my payout ratio criteria. Fortunately, they did not meet my price point prior to this announcement, so I did not own any Barnes shares. However, this does highlight additional risks that must be considered and reinforces the need to do the following:
  • Constantly review the latest stock data to ensure a given stock continues to fit your purchase criteria.
  • Be wary of stocks that suffer a drastic price drop. Be sure and check out all the latest news before buying in.
  • Be careful about placing buy orders that will trigger automatically based on specific purchase prices. Your order will still execute after bad news has been announced.
  • Understand that a similar event will eventually occur after you've' made a purchase and allow for that in your trading strategy.

If/when this last event occurs, there are at least three paths you can follow:

  1. Stop-loss - Take your lumps and get out quickly. Personally, I hesitate to do this unless the news is truly devastating. But if that's the case, then the price will already be past a reasonable stop-loss price point anyway.
  2. Hold - The stock is on the list for a good reason. It's assumed to be a sound company that can bounce back from bad news. So it would make sense to hold it for the long term. Logically, this is the course I would hope to follow in most cases.
  3. Double-down - If indeed you believe in the fundamentals of the stock, why not buy more after the price drops? This is my Achilles Heel as it is too often my first instinct. However, I hope I can fight this and avoid "throwing good money after bad."

So this begs the question of what I would have done in the case of Barnes if I already owned it? I am marginally tempted to buy in now at the lower price point (and higher dividend yield), but I would hold I would avoid the temptation to double down. Despite the reduced revenue, they appear capable of maintaining the current dividend rate. So I would see little reason to sell immediately and I imagine I would hold this for the long run.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Micro Margin Strategy?

In the last month, I've watched the rise and falls of the market and specific stocks with great interest. In particular, I've seen certain stocks rise and fall by 2-3 percentage points on a frequent basis. It leaves me thinking that I should jump in with a significant amount when the stock hits what I perceive as the low, then sell out after a 50-100 basis point rise.

The intent would be to trade my usual 5-9% margin for a much smaller percentage gain, but to make it up in volume (greater number of shares and greater number of trades).

This is not my usual strategy and obviously has a lot of downside risk. I'm unlikely to actually pull the trigger unless the stock reaches my buy-in price, but the temptation to act as the more prototypical day trader is certainly there at times when I'm seeing volatility but am still sitting on the sidelines.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Diversification Lesson

I've broken one of my own rules. While acquiring other stocks, I purchased Abbott Labs, Pfizer and Merck, who are all in a similar pharmaceutical/health products market. Although I think all these companies are good purchases, and will work out well at the current price points, I should avoid this in the future. This sector is obviously lagging as I've sold all my other holding during the recent market surge, but these have not yet hit my sales price and I'm currently left with only these three holdings. I'm a bit exposed in case this sector would take a dive. But I didn't even realize it when I was making purchases because of the other stocks I was buying.

Another lesson learned. I should consider pharmaceuticals in the same way that I consider banking, energy and utility stocks in the future.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Volatility's The Thing

Today was the fourth straight positive day for the market and I had a light bulb come on. I've always heard day trader's talk about the importance of volatility and I understood it's importance on a conceptual level, but after today, I really understood the importance at a more practical level.

If the market continues in the current direction, I will soon liquidate all my positions with a nice little profit. However, I will be in a 100% cash position with no real opportunities for reinvesting in the short run since all of the stocks on my list are well above the "buy price" that I've set.

So I'm faced with three options (which aren't mutually exclusive):
  1. Expand my universe of desirable stocks. Of course, I'm loathe to do this to any great extent because I am risk adverse. However, I will indeed look for other conservative stocks that I might have missed during previous screenings.
  2. Raise the "buy price" for the existing pool of stocks. I'm equally hesitant to do this, but I think price histories should be reviewed to see if I might have initially set the buy price too low.
  3. Set on the sidelines until the market drops a bit. I'm sure I will get antsy after a while, but I think this is prudent until the next light bulb clicks on.

It will be interesting how the market goes next. Although it would be to the detriment of my long term portfolio, I find myself wishing for a major correction.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

May 2009 Trading

I sold the following stocks in May. In all cases except one, return was greater than 5%:
  • Pfizer
  • Waste Management
  • McDonalds
  • VF Corp
  • ADP
  • Telecom Systems, Inc. (yield 4.9%, liquidated position early as non-income stock was not consistent with overall trading strategy)

I'm holding the following:

  • CMS Energy - up 1%
  • Kimberly Clark - up 3.7 %
  • Abbott Labs - up 5.1%
  • Chubb Corp - up 1.7%
  • Clorox - up 2.7%

I collected May dividends on the following:

  • CMS Energy

My Trading Strategy (circa 2009)

At the time I started day trading (early May, 2009), interest rates were hovering at historic lows and the stock market was riding a two month surge after falling to 10 year lows.

In recent years, I've bought and held income stocks and invested in callable and non-callable CDs. I've also dabbled in technology stocks for companies that I've worked for in the past. The market interest rate has resulted in the calling of many CDs, so I found myself in a strong cash position in my Traditional IRA and Roth IRA accounts.

Given this cash, I decided to dust off my old income stock strategy to make it meet my current needs.

The renewed strategy again depends on income stocks, but I've made a number of refinements. I no longer look for the absolute highest payers. The market is littered with recent dividend cuts, and the higher yields are often at risk. Also, I no longer look for stocks that are going ex-dividend within days. The dividends are still important as a secondary source of income, but capital gains are now the main target.

There are several components to this updated and hopefully improved strategy.

Stock Targeting - First, I needed to find a pool of candidate stocks. Although I'm looking to trade the stocks quite quickly, I want to make sure that I would be comfortable holding them for the long term in case the price does not move in the direction that I wish. I primarily screen based on the following criteria:
  • Dividend yield between 3% and 6%
  • Payout ratio less than 60%
  • P/E Ratio less than 15
  • Reasonably high market cap and volume
  • Reasonably high analyst ratings/recommendations
Buying Trigger - Now that I have a pool of candidate stocks, I have to decide which ones to buy and when to buy them. Unfortunately, I'm not into technical analysis, so my approach is more by the seat of my pants. I look at the recent trading range and pick a number at the low end of the range as my target. I hope to become more scientific about setting this number in the future, but right now it's based on my gut. If a stock dips to that price, I buy in. I also eliminate some candidate stocks at this point if the trading range is very narrow. If the price only varies by 1%, it's hard to recognize any significant short term gains.

Buy-in Amount - I always buy into a stock with approximately the same amount of money so that all holdings are in about equal dollar amounts (except for double downs, see below). I usually try to buy in round lots for convenience even though my broker does not charge a premium for odd-lot trades.

Diversification - There are some industries such as high-tech that will only rarely meet my filtering criteria, And there are others like energy where most companies are buy candidates. so I try to be careful not to be over-represented in a given industry. I try to hold only 1-2 stocks from a given industry at a time even though I might have several on my filtered list. There are also some industries that I avoid entirely because I perceive more risk than I'm willing to bear. This currently includes tobacco products and banking, although I've been tempted by some yields I've seen.

Tax Strategy - My hope is to capture significant short term capital gains, so minimizing taxes is an important consideration. Therefore I use tax deferred accounts as my main investment vehicle while taxable accounts are used for living expenses. I'll worry about taxes when I take my distributions at some point in the future. Most purchases are made with my Traditional IRAs accounts (where I have greater funds) and I use my Roth IRAs for the investements where I expect the highest yields since these gains won't be subject to future tax (see double downs below).

Sell Trigger - Like the buy trigger, my sell trigger is a bit soft. I usually look for at least a 5% gain, but if the stock is trading in wide range with a lot of valitility, I might set the sell price to be much greater. However, this is subject to reduction if I feel a need to cash out due to fear related to a market or company variable or perhaps I'll cash out early because I see a better use for the funds with another security. As I mentioned before, I don't worry about waiting for a stock to go ex-dividend, but if it does, it's a nice added bonus.

Unlike many day traders, I do not use stop-loss. I don't want to be automatically removed from my position due to market fluctuations. I make an attempt to select strong companies that I'm willing to hold for years. Of course this might mean that I cease to be a trader if the market turns bullish for the long term, but I will continue to be rewared with dividends as long as the individual tocks in my portfolio remain strong.

Double Down - On occasion, my buy target proves to be a bit high and the stock price continues to drop after I buy in. Assuming that the fundamentals of the stock remain strong and I remain confident that it will surge upward, I will use this as an opportunity to buy additional shares at the lower price. When I do this, I use the money from the Roth IRAs for this second position. For example, let's say I originally bought a stock at $20 and planned to sell it at $21 for a $1 profit per share. However, the stock dropped to $19 dollars, so I would buy additional shares via the Roth IRA with an intention of earning $2 per share tax free ($21-$19) on this second purchase.

Cash Management - I actively trade with less than half of my available cash. This allows for ready cash in case the market turns bearish and greater buying opportunities present themselves.

My Trading Strategy v1 (circa 1983)

I first developed a stock trading strategy as part of a Finance class at the University of Kentucky way back in the mid 80's. We were assigned an imaginary $10,000 portfolio for us to handle as we saw fit for the duration of the semester.

My strategy was quite simple. I would use the old bulky Value Line Survey at the school library and find income stocks that were about to go ex-dividend, buy them, collect the dividend and sell them for the basically the same price that I bought them for. My holding period was usually only a week and I was cleaning up with dividend income for most of the semester and thinking that I had a new career in front of me.

As the semester was drawing to a close, I was becoming more and more cocky with my strategy, putting my whole portfolio into whatever stock had the absolute highest yield. Then it happened....Pacific Gas & Electric. I dumped all my money into PG&E a few days before the dividend announcement...but the announcement I expected never came. Instead, they announced that construction on their nuclear plant was way over-budget and behind schedule. In fact, things were so bad that they were going to reduce or suspend their dividend (I forget which). As you might guess, the stock price plunged and I took a bath. As I recall, my portfolio that peaked at about $13-14K was now down to about $6,000. Alas, I turned in my report documenting my brilliant strategy and my humbling results.

If you remember the 80's, you'll recall that there were no sophisticated tools for tracking imaginary portfolios, so the trading was pretty much on the honor system and tracked in paper logs by the individual students. As you might expect from typical college students, many of my classmates took advantage retroactive trading and posted some pretty impressive gains over the course of the semester making my results even more disastrous.

But I'm pleased to say that it ended well. When the grades were handed out, my teacher singled my report out as the best because I had a strategy, even though it proved to be a flawed strategy.

And most importantly, I learned a valuable lesson, 4 months of well executed and successful trading can be wiped out by one poor decision. This made me the conservative investor that I am today.

A Change Of Income

I'm a long time software implementation professional and I recently found myself with a drastic reduction in my workload and similar reduction from my paycheck. As a result, I have a lot of time on my hands and a strong desire to replace my lost income. I'm looking for implementation work, but I'm approaching 50 and over the years I've become quite selective about the projects I undertake. So I suspect it will take a while to replace my past income via a salaried position.

Given this, I decided to give "day trading" a try. Actually, I'm not sure if I meet the strict definition of a day trader because I don't recall ever flipping a stock within a business day. But if indeed a stock meets my trading criteria, I would flip it immediately.

This blog is intended to track my trading and document my evolving strategy for myself. Also, this is a way to let my wife know what the hell I'm doing with the money that she could be using for toenail polish and sushi. And this may allow her to continue trading in the event I'm hit by the proverbial bus and she gets sick of sushi. And finally, if the results are not too embarrassing....perhaps I'll share this with others who may want to incorporate elements of my strategy into their own trading.