June 8, 2016
Inside Trading
TradeWins Publishing

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George Angell




One-time West Coast contributing editor of Futures Magazine, George Angell is the author of eight books on the futures and options markets, including Winning in the Futures Markets, which has been translated into Chinese, and is still in print 28 years after its first publication. He was a Chicago floor trader during the Eighties and credits that experience for the success of West of Wall Street, which he co-wrote with S&P pit trader Barry Haigh during his Chicago years, and Sniper Trading, which tracks the valuable lessons he learned while on the floor. In recent years, he has turned toward trading small stocks. 'There are enormous sums of money to be made trading undervalued small stocks,' says Angell. A graduate of New YorkUniversity, Angell currently resides in Key West, Florida which he considers the perfect antidote to the stress-filled years of the Chicago pit trader.


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I am going to reveal how you can make really big money even though you may not have much to invest.

How you can discover an almost endless stream of stock market bargains that have tremendous upside potential… because they are not overbought and over-priced like the popular stocks promoted by analysts.

In fact, I'm not talking about the stock market the way you think of it now. I'm not talking about a bunch of blue-chip stocks to "buy and hold" for the next 20 years.

I'm talking about acquiring a fortune. What I'm talking about is completely different from "investing." I'm talking about making the kind of money that can set you free. A unique way of thinking about the market that can make your heart beat a little faster… And your wallet grow a lot fatter!

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Our Author Team

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Our featured author this week is George Angell. In his article, George details breakout patterns and how to trade them.

Lee Gettess brings us our next segment with his weekly video newsletter analyzing the market for the upcoming week.

Then, we hear from Russell Sands who explains how to calculate your stop loss.

Last, Chris Verhaegh presents his PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter.

Enjoy!

Adrienne LaVigne
TradeWins Publishing



 

Breakouts

by George Angell

The following is an excerpt from George Angell's Small Stocks, Big Profits

The breakout is a classical bullish pattern that occurs when the number and strength of the buyers overwhelms the sellers.  As the name suggests, breakouts occur when prices move away from an area where they have been consolidating for a period of time.  The corresponding bearish pattern is typically known as the breakdown.  In the breakout, the accumulation of shares exceeds the distribution and share values rise.  The breakout is normally accomplished on a price gap when share values leave a space on the chart which is often not filled.  The unfilled gap on a chart is known as a breakaway gap.

The breakout is the simplest and most important pattern for the beginning chartist to know.  By definition, a rising stock must take out its high.  Buying the breakout, therefore, is one of the strongest possible buys a technical analyst can make.  Unfortunately, the strategy is fraught with danger since one is buying a new high amid a flurry of buying activity.  The risk is that the breakout proves false and the market then subsequently trades back down into the so-called consolidation area between the resistance and support.  When the pattern fails in this fashion, this is known as a false breakout.  For the buyer of the breakout, this failure means trouble.  The buyer, who buys a breakout, may have just purchased near the top of the move.  The failure of the move suggests the odds now favor prices trending lower.  The best way to deal with the scenario is to immediately sell the position at a loss.

A more encouraging sign occurs when the breakout is accompanied by high volume.  A high-volume breakout will frequently mean a legitimate move to the upside.  Often news-driven, this breakout must be purchased immediately lest the investor be left behind.  A typical scenario of a news-driven event culminating in a breakout will be a better-than-expected earnings report released before the opening bell.  With a mountain of buy orders bidding the stock higher, the opening price will often gap higher and run.  When this occurs, you have a breakaway gap.  This breakout is the real thing.  Timid investors who cautiously wait for “reason” to enter the market and push prices lower will be disappointed because their orders to buy will go unfilled.

Breakouts can be confusing to the novice trader who is unprepared for the fast and furious price action that often accompanies them.  The breakout can be indicative of a stop-running operation in which the market is momentarily taken higher (in order to run the stops) only to be lower moments later when the initial buying flurry subsides.


Breakouts

 
 

Lee Gettess' Market Sense

by Lee Gettess

Lee Gettess is a top trader who is excited to bring you his video newsletter. Each week, Lee will share his predictions on what he anticipates from the bond and S&P markets.




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How to Calculate Your Stop Loss

by Russell Sands

In this video clip from Russell Sands’ Turtle Forex Seminar, Russell covers how to calculate risk and set your stop loss using the average true range. What exactly is the average true range and what does it demonstrate to the trader? Sands also explains how you can use the average true range to determine your position size. For more information, please visit http://www.tradewins.com.



Watch Video

 
 

PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter

by Chris Verhaegh

The following is an excerpt from Chris Verhaegh’s PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter

Every week Chris Verhaegh publishes his “PULSE Options Weekly Newsletter”. The following is from his most recent issue.

First Things First

This week, we must look backwards to last week’s Non-Farm Payroll (NFP) report to better get a feel where things are going forward.

Friday, June 3rd’s “Jobs” report came in at a paltry 38,000 jobs added to the economy compared to the Analysts’ Estimate of 159,000 jobs being added.

This dramatic disappointment appears to have taken away any and all chance that the Federal Reserve (the “Fed”) would raise rates at their June FOMC Meeting ending on Wednesday, June 15th.

To Learn More Click Here

 

PLEASE READ. Past results are not necessarily indicative of future results. There is a substantial risk of loss trading commodities, stocks, bonds and options with or without this or any other advertised product, service or system. Also hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Unlike an actual performance record, simulated results do not represent actual trading. Since the trades have not actually been executed, the results may have under-or-over compensated for the impact, if any, of certain market factors, such as lack of liquidity. Simulated trading programs in general are also subject to the fact that they are designed with the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown.