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Making Money with Shares – Vince Stanzione gives some top tips
Fed up of picking the wrong shares? Then here are a few tips taken from Making Money From
Financial Spread Trading that can get you on the right track
Vince Says:
1. Buy strength, sell weakness
Everyone likes a bargain. It's human nature! But here’s the truth: you don’t make money
from buying bargains.
Cheap stocks often appear to be bargains after a large drop, but they often continue to fall.
Buy break outs and sell them higher. Sell shares that are breaking down. Never let anyone
tell you they are cheap and can’t go any lower!
2. Trade active stocks
Many newcomers don’t realise that while you have thousands of companies quoted on
the stock market both in the UK and US, most of these stocks don’t move much.
If you look at the daily volume of share traded on many companies you, will see that nothing
has been traded. Always trade active shares with volume, and sectors that are active or
trending well.
Spreads are the tightest on the most active shares such as Vodafone, BP, Unilever, BT,
and GlaxoSmithKline.
By using filters on a website like Sharescope.com, you can list only shares that are active – for
example those that have moved up or down by 3%.
You can also list all companies that are 20 days or less from their all time lows or highs.
3. Look at shares as if they are people
Stocks often act like people. Each has its own personality. What’s more, a stock can
change from one to another quickly.
Like people, stocks can be steady, predictable plodders or aggressive and unpredictably.
Charts and moving averages can help you spot the personalities which you can trade.
4. Trade the trend
Don’t try to be smart and pick the top or bottoms, just trade with the trend. Of course
the trend will never last forever, but by using a trailing stop you can lock in profits
along the way.
5. Add to winning trades never add to a losing trade
You’ll sometimes hear so-called experts advocate averaging down. Don’t listen! Never
add to a losing trade. Instead, add to winning trades. If you buy £1 and the stock goes
to £1.50, buy some more.
For long-term investments of five to ten years, buying units on a monthly average price may
make sense, but never average down shorter term trades.
6. If the trade is wrong, cut it!
Your first loss is normally the smallest. If you were expecting something to happen
and it doesn’t, simply cut it. Also, if you have a stop set and the share is heading
towards it, don’t move your stop unless you have a very good reason to.
For example: if you start with £1,000 and you lose 20%, you are left with £800. You
now need to make 25% to get back to £1,000.
If you let a trade move 50% against you, you will now need to gain 100% to get back to
£1,000.
7. If you can’t see a trend then don't trade
Markets and shares don’t always trend. In many cases a share could consolidate for weeks,
months and years. Vince Stanzione likes to trade trends, and if something is not trending
he recommends walking away. Come back when it starts to trend.
8. Let the winners run
For many, holding a winning trade is as painful as holding a losing one. The only way you
can survive is to let winners run more than you let losers run.
If you have a plant in your garden and it is growing well and strong, you don’t dig
it up and kill it. So, don’t do the same with your healthy trades. The majority do
of traders do exactly this. As a broker, Vince Stanzione saw it all the time. He says clients
often wanted him to sell their winning stocks, and keep their losing stocks!
Use a trailing stop to lock in profits. If you really find it hard to let a winning trade
run then part close the trade and run the rest.
To learn everything you need to know about trading successfully, go to www. thespreadtrader.com.
You can apply Vince Stanzione’s proven strategies in less than 30 minutes per day. Go to thespreadtrader.com
to get started.