Stock Buying Strategy
It was just recently that I realized there was a big mistake in my stock buying strategy. After reading James Cramer’s “Real Money” twice, it hit me about the “buying low for stocks for investment” and “never confuse investment with trading”. I have noticed that my buying points for “hot” stocks are always too high in the short term. In other words, there is a confliction in my stock trading that I confuse trading with investment for some stocks. Based on my stock picking method which is modified from O’Neil’s method, the stocks I picked are usually investments. These are usually good companies in hot sectors, such as basic materials, mineral stocks now. In this case, I should buy them when they are correcting, and should buy them stepwise instead of all at once. Based on O’Neil’s method, I should put down money within 5% of the breakout point. But based on Cramer, I should start to buy them at the bottom of the cups, and cumulate them on the right side of the cup.
So which is the better buying strategy? I really don’t know. Based on my pass experience, I think that Cramer’s way makes more sense. If I am looking for a medium to long term capital appreciation (one month and beyond), buying on the breakouts may not be the best way if I am certain that these hot stocks are going to be hot for at least a couple of years. Besides, it is very difficult to execute O’Neil’s buying strategy unless I set up a limit buy order on them ahead of times on the stock candidates. So far, I seldom do that.
But sometimes, some hot stocks will not correct for quite a while, nor will it form any cup patterns. IIIN is a typical case. I jumped in at $37 on its uptrend and ride it all the way to high 50s, which only took 5 weeks. It topped at $60 and have been correcting back to $54. If I had waited for hot stocks like IIIN for any correction, I would have missed this run. IIIN almost never stops until it hits $50 and $60.
IIIN would not fit O’Neil’s criteria: its revenue score is only 33 instead of 80 or above. I found it on
RAIL, on the other hand, was a perfect execution using O’Neil’s method. I bought it at $50.80 on