Posts Tagged ‘AMZN’
Monday, May 13th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, no calls due to data issues over the weekend from my scanning provider. The MRVL that we have been watching for the last 5 sessions did trigger (without market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

COST triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

TEVA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, May 9th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, CPHD triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

BIDU triggered long (without market support just barely) and worked great:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, AMZN triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

We put the trade back into the Messenger and it triggered long again (with market support) and worked great:

GOOG triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMGN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and ultimately worked, but technically stopped using our 1-point number:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, 1 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, May 8th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, IDTI triggered long (with market support) and worked:

TIBX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t do enough in either direction to count:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Mark’s AZN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

NTAP triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all 4 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, azn, idti, ntap, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, May 7th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, PBCT triggered long (with market support) and held in the money, although never did much and we closed it when market direction rolled, but note that even in a flat market, the Comber called the high:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AKAM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s YHOO triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

COST triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 2 did not, and we won’t count PBCT.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, April 3rd, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, MAKO triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

QLGC triggered short (with market support) and worked:

KLIC triggered short (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s FFIV triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a quick partial:

His FAS triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked great:

His TSLA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His VECO triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His BIIB triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work initially, worked later:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

CELG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s LUV triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His RGLD triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 10 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, fas, nflx, stock recap, tsla
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, April 1st, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s FB triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

His NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His DECK triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, all 3 of them worked. We are now 13 for 13 in our last 3 days of trades that triggered with market support.
Tags: AMZN, deck, nflx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, March 28th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, COST triggered long (with market support) and worked:

CTRP triggered long (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s GDX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His GOOG triggered short late in the day (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Mark’s BIIB triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His ASML triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, all 7 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, cost, gdx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 20th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered…again.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s CLF triggered long (without market support) and worked:

His AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

TLT triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

Rich’s BIDU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, March 8th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, CROX gapped over the trigger, no play.
SHLD triggered long (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AAPL triggered long (without market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, all 3 worked.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, shld, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 6th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, PMTC triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

SPRD triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

PAYX gapped over, no play.
JBLU triggered long (without market support) and didn’t get a dime in either direction, so doesn’t count:

DMND triggered long (without market support just barely) and worked great:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s SNDK triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s VXX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s SINA triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 3 did not, 1 didn’t do anything. No surprise on a day where the market was stuck.
Tags: AMZN, dmnd, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, February 22nd, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, FSLR triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

BIDU triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and we ended up closing it out at even when market direction flipped:

In total, that’s 2 trades triggering with market support, 1 of them worked, and 1 was flat due to a market directional shift.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, February 20th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

COST triggered short (with market support) and we closed it at the entry late in the session:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked cleanly and 1 we closed at the entry because it was late in the day (it ended up working too).
Tags: AAPL, aig, AMZN, cost, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, February 12th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ANGI triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s FAS triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work initially, worked great later:

His KLAC triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His SNDK triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His APC triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His VMW triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s BWLD triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

TEVA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 4 did not.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap, teva, vmw
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, February 8th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, DECK triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 2 trades triggering with market support, both of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, deck, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, February 7th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, CRZO triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s VXX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His CAT triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His FDX triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GOOG triggered long (without market support) and worked, and the high of the session was the UPT exactly:

NTAP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, cat, ntap, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, February 5th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s GOOG triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

His GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

TLT triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

Rich’s CSC triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, gs, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, February 5th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ATML triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked enough for a partial:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s DECK triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His HLF triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GDX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His HUM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His BIDU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His JPM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His EBAY triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, atml, deck, hum, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 30th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

His FIRE triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His PXD triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s FB triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

COST triggered short (with market support) but we closed it around the entry as the market went into “waiting for Fed mode” after the first 90 minutes or so:

Rich’s CREE triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His RIMM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GDX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 2 did not, but some of the better calls went early.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, January 29th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, CERN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AMZN triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked great:

His VXX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work, although the retrigger worked great:

Rich’s RIMM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 2 did not, which doesn’t sound nearly as good as the results actually were.
Tags: AMZN, cern, rimm, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 16th, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, this was one of those rare days where nothing triggered off of the report.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s CRUS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

Rich’s JPM triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His ALNY triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His HLF triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His AMGN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

FSLR triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work, worked later:

COST triggered too late in the session.
In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 1 of them worked, 3 did not. A rare day with an under 50% win ratio, but few triggers, and the ones that worked just didn’t have market support at the time.
Tags: AMZN, fslr, hlf, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, January 3rd, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, SNTA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

SYMC triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

TQNT gapped over, no play.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s FDO triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His WLP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (just barely with market support) and worked:

Rich’s TJX triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His XLNX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GE triggered short (with market support) and worked a little, no risk:

His VMW triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap, vmw
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, January 2nd, 2013
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
No calls in the report.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 2 trades triggering with market support, both of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 19th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ITMN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

DNKN, SOHU, and FLIR gapped over, no plays. RGLD gapped under the short trigger, no play.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s VXX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His EBAY triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

His FAS triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His DISH triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His VMW triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap, vxx
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 19th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
Nothing triggered off of the report.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, TLT triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked enough for a partial while filling the gap:

Rich’s AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

TRIP triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 2 trades triggering with market support, both of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap, tlt
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, December 17th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, CTRP triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

INFA gapped over, no play.
MDRX triggered short (without market support) and didn’t go enough in either direction to count:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s X triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked for a couple of points:

His GS triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

His BIIB triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

TLT triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked great:

NFLX triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

NTAP triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, gs, stock recap, tlt
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, December 14th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His OIH triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked enough for a partial:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked for a couple of points:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His JOY triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His LULU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, oih
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 12th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, SPWR triggered long (without market support) and worked:

ROVI triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

NUVA triggered long (without market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Mark’s AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His APC triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, spwr, stocks recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, November 30th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, MXIM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s BIDU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His YUM triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, November 26th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, FB gapped over the trigger, no play.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s SPY triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

His FAS triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

His NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CRM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

SINA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

TLT triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked, although never went far:

Rich’s LRCX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Mark’s XLNX triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, crm, stock recap, tlt
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Monday, November 19th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, PDCO triggered long (with market support) and eventually worked enough for a partial:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s CRUS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work initially, but worked great on the retrigger a few minutes later:

Rich’s VXX triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His CSTR triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His FAZ triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, crus, stock recap, vxx
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Thursday, November 15th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, KLAC triggered short (with market support) and worked:

EBAY triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked enough for a partial:

SOHU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work initially, worked later:

SBGI triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked eventually:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s JPM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

TLT triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

Rich’s AKAM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GS triggered short in the afternoon (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His AAPL triggered short (without market support) in the afternoon and worked:

GOOG triggered short again in the afternoon (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 12 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 6 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, klac, stock recap, tlt
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Tuesday, November 13th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, QLIK triggered short (without market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

COST triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s KLAC in the afternoon triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 2 trades triggering with market support, and both of them worked, as did the two that triggered without market support.
Tags: AMZN, cost, klac, stock recap
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Sunday, November 11th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, SCSS triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

COST triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Mark’s ORCL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, cost, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, November 1st, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, RIMM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Mark’s VECO triggered long (with market support) and worked:

SINA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

BIIB triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, biib, stock recap, veco
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Wednesday, October 31st, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ENDP triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

VVUS triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked great:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, we had several calls, but the only one that triggered was AMZN short (with market support) and that worked:

In total, that’s 1 trade triggering with market support, and it worked.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap
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Monday, October 22nd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, COST triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

FWLT triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His FCX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His BTU triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His JPM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CMG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His APC triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a couple of points:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, cmg, jpm, stock recap
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Wednesday, October 17th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, MELI triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work, although we did take it later when it triggered and had a nice winner, but we don’t count the retriggers officially:

ORLY triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and might have worked, or not, depending on how tight you kept the wild opening trigger:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s CHKP triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His FTNT triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Mark’s BRCM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s BIDU triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His afternoon AAPL triggered short (without market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support; all 3 of them worked. We had other great winners, but without market support. Several of them.
Tags: AMZN, brcm, meli, stock recap
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Monday, October 15th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, VRA gapped over the trigger, no play.
TTWO triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

FLIR triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

TSLA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Mark’s GILD triggered long (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s LULU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t do enough in either direction to count:

His AMT triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Mark’s AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

NFLX triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, GOOG, stock recap
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Tuesday, October 9th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ACTG gapped under the trigger, no play.
CRUS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s GILD triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

His FCX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

COST triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s OIH triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, stock recap
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Thursday, October 4th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, SCLN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

THOR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, NTAP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AMZN triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

His CTXS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His DRN triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work initially, worked later:

Mark’s AKAM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s FAS triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s MSTR triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

Mark’s AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 3 did not. Several winners were big.
Tags: akam, AMZN, stock recap, thor
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Monday, October 1st, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, SRPT triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

MPEL gapped over the trigger, no play.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s VXX triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

His FAS triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked great:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

TEVA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s IBM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AGU triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a quick partial:

His NSM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s SODA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 11 trades triggering with market support, 9 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, fas, GOOG, stock recap
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Thursday, September 27th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, IDCC triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

ALTR triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

NTAP triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, idcc, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, September 24th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, HAIN triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s AMZN triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

His GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Several other calls but nothing triggered.
In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, GOOG, stock recap
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Wednesday, September 19th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, IPXL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GTAT triggered long (with market support) and didn’t go enough in either direction to count:

ROST triggered short (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s CF triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work initially:

His ENR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN in the afternoon triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, enr, ipxl, rost, stock recap
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Monday, September 17th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, FFIV triggered long (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s CLF triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His JOY triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s ONXX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

NFLX triggered too late in the day to be meaningful.
In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked, some of them very nicely considering the market.
Tags: AMZN, ffiv, onxx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, September 13th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, VELT triggered long (with market support) and didn’t go enough in either direction to count:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s VMW triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His EQIX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His VXX triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His CF triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His CLF triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s X triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, cf, clf, nflx, stock recap, vxx
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, August 31st, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
No calls in the report.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, just one call, AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great, that was my only trade of the day:

In total, that’s 1 trade triggering with market support, and it worked great.
Tags: AMZN, stock picks
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, August 20th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, nothing triggered.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s VMW triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His NFLX triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GOOG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His LNKD triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 1 of them worked, 4 did not. Lowest winning percentage in a while to go with the light volume.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 15th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, PCYC triggered long (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s SBUX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His SINA triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His JDSU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

BIDU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s EBAY triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His SLB triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 12 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 6 did not. Several worked extremely well.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, pcyc, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, August 13th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ITRI triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

FMCN gapped over, no play.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s CRM triggered long over the opening 5 minute bar high (with market support) and worked:

His GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His SOHU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His POT triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

NTAP triggered long (with market support) and didn’t go enough either way to count (and closed right at the trigger):

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 1 did not, but nothing really went far.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, sohu, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Wednesday, August 8th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
Nothing triggered off of the report.
From the Messenger/Tradesight_st Twitter Feed, Rich’s MCD triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His SODA triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

His OIH triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked enough for a partial:

His PXD triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

His WYNN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s ESRX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s RAX triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His GDX triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

FSLR triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, pxd, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, July 31st, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, MCHP triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s GOOG triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His VMW triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His SBUX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His OIH triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His NTGR triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, oih, sbux, stock recap, vmw
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, July 24th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, WPRT and SPRD gapped over their long triggers, no plays. CSCO gapped under its short trigger. No other triggers.
In the Messenger/Twitter, Rich’s VMW triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His BIDU triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s OIH triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His RCII triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, all 6 of them worked, at least enough for a partial. Only two did much beyond that.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, bidu, GOOG, oih, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, July 23rd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, BPOP triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

The other three gapped past their triggers.
In the Messenger, Rich’s BIDU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CELG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His OIH triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His SOXX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, oih, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, July 12th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial (before reversing hard, which is why we HAVE to manage trades):

JDSU gapped under the trigger, no play.
BRCM triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked enough for a partial:

CY triggered short (with market support) and barely worked enough for a partial, no risk either way:

CREE triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

FMCN triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

TLT triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

BIIB triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, sina, stock recap
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Monday, July 9th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, FOSL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

NTAP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AFFY triggered short (with market support) and worked:

PMTC triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

CHKP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, AAPL triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked for a couple of points:

AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, and 7 of them worked, as did the AAPL long out of the gate. Nice day.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, fosl, ntap, stock recap
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Monday, June 25th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, VCLK and FWLT gapped beyond their triggers.
CRIS triggered long (without market support) and worked a little:

SCSS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger, Rich’s VXX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s CAT triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His SHPGY triggered long (without market support) and worked a little:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, gs, scss, stock recap
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Thursday, June 21st, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, JBLU triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

SOHU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s CELG triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t worked:

His CSX triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His UA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His JPM triggered long (without market support) and worked:

His GLD triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and didn’t work the first time (a sweep), worked the second:

His IWM triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

His BTU triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial to the gap fill:

RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His ONXX triggered long (without market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Mark’s DISH triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GRMN triggered short (with market support) and didn’t go enough in either direction to count:

Rich’s PXD triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His EOG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His VXX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work the first time, worked the second (we only count the first for official results):

In total, that’s 14 trades triggering with market support, 11 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, btu, GOOG, stock picks, vxx
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Monday, June 11th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
Nothing triggered off of the report with the gap (CRAY gapped over).
In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work, but wasn’t really the intended trigger, he was watching it out of the gate anyway:

My AAPL short triggered (with market support) and worked:

His NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s VXX triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked huge:

AMZN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t do much:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMGN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GOOG triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His DNKN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His CF triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Another AAPL called triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work initially, sweeping the trigger and retracing over a point, before triggering and working great:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, stock recap, vxx
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Tuesday, May 22nd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ANGI triggered short (without market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His BBY triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His SHLD triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His VMW triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His CAT triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His NFLX triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, gs, nflx, stock recap
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Thursday, May 17th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, PCYC triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked enough for a partial if you were quick, and worked more later, but doesn’t count anyway due to opening 5 minute trigger):

IDIX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

NVLS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

LULU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s SHLD triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work:

His GOOG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His DE triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s LULU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His FAS triggered short (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, fas, nvls, stock recap
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Wednesday, May 16th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, BMRN gapped over, no play.
ISIS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t go enough in either direction to count:

QCOM triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

MSFT triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work (I don’t usually list MSFT anymore because it rarely goes anywhere, and this was no exception):

SBUX triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Mark’s ENDP triggered short (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked quickly:

Rich’s GS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work initially, worked later:

Rich’s LNKD triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His GOOG triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

His GLD triggered long (ETF, so no market support needed) and worked enough for a partial:

His WYNN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His DE triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His JCP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 10 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 4 did not, and several of the winners ran big.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, jcp, stock recap
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Friday, May 4th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, with the gap down in the market, most of the shorts (QLIK, MASI, CELG, and PTEN) gapped under their trigger, so no plays.
LAMR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s VMW triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His PCLN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His ALXN triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

COST triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, lamr, pcln, stock recap, vmw
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Tuesday, May 1st, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ELNK triggered long (with market support) and worked:

SIMO triggered short (without market support) and worked:

From the Messenger, Rich’s SHLD triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

Rich’s CAT triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s MA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

ESRX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (without market support, late in the session) and worked:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, elnk, shld, simo, stock recap
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Thursday, April 26th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, DNDN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

NTES triggered long (with market support) and worked, although you had to be fast:

VPRT triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked huge:

TEVA triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

Rich’s VMW triggered long (with market support) and worked:

BIIB triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, all 7 of them worked great.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, dndn, stock recap, vmw
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Tuesday, April 24th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ONXX triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

PLCE triggered short (with market support) and worked:

SANM gapped under the trigger, no play.
TRIP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His BWLD triggered short (without market support) and worked, but would have been hard to get on the news:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all 4 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, plce, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, April 19th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, CIEN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

SIMG triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

SPRD triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work (we cut this off for a few penny loss in the Lab):

VMED triggered short (with market support) and didn’t go ten cents in either direction, so doesn’t count either way:

In the Messenger, Rich’s VXX triggered long (ETF, no support needed) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

WYNN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 7 did not. Easily our worst win ratio of the year on a day when the market changed directions six times.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, stock recap
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Monday, April 16th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, ARAY triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

JDAS triggered long (without market support) and didn’t do enough either way to count:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s PCLN triggered short (with market support) and worked for a couple of points:

His FFIV triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all of them worked.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, ffiv, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, April 9th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, GPOR and STLD gappd under the triggers, no plays.
In the Messenger, Rich’s MON triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s FFIV triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His FIRE triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GPOR triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s GMCR triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s GOOG triggered short (without market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all 4 of them worked, plus some that triggered without market support.
Tags: AMZN, gpor, nflx, stock recap
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Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. ETF calls do not require market support, and are thus either winners or losers.
From the report, BMRN triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s SLV triggered long (ETF) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s AZO triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His MDVN triggered long (without market support) and worked:

His FCX triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, fcx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, April 2nd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
There were no calls for end of quarter on the report.
In the Messenger, Rich’s VXX triggered long (no need for market support on an ETF) and worked:

His CAT triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

His IBM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work initially, worked fine after:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, stock recap, vxx
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, March 26th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, ENDP triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked great:

CTSH triggered long (with market support) and worked:

TIVO triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

EGLE triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes, but this is a Small Cap pick and should just be taken) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s ALXN triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

RIMM triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s VMW triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

TEVA triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s UA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s MA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s MDVN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked (several extremely well, which was a surprise given market volume), 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, GOOG, mdvn, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, March 13th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, CTXS triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

VECO triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, Rich’s SHLD triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His YOKU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His FFIV triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Many more calls were posted to the Messenger, none of them triggered.
In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, ffiv, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, March 8th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, GRPN triggered short (with market support) and worked nicely even though the market reversed to the upside shortly after the trigger:

In the Messenger, Rich’s GMCR triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (without market support) and swept the trigger, so the raw call doesn’t count, but in the Lab, we told people to take it if the market direction turned green, which it did right before AMZN ran. Still doesn’t count officially, but my second biggest winner of the day:

NTAP triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s CAT triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial and more:

His COH triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, grpn, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, March 5th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, FSLR triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked great:

In the Messenger, AMZN triggered long (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s LULU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s SFLY triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His PCLN triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His SHLD triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His SODA triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, fslr, lulu, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, February 23rd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, BRLI triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

SXCI gapped over, no play.
SINA gapped under, no play.
In the Messenger, TEVA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

SINA triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial, note that it ran right into the green static trendline and stopped:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap, teva
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, February 17th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, ATML triggered long (with market support) and was starting to work, but didn’t go enough to count:

PLCM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, TEVA triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s ITRI triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work initially, worked later:

His SHLD triggered long (with market support) and went enough for a partial, but it was late in the day when the market went flat:

His AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His GOOG triggered short (without market support) and worked:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap, teva
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, January 30th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, CSTR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s GOOG triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

COST triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

NTES triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial, and I also called the top in the room late in the day as the high bar was a 13-sell signal on the Comber:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, cost, GOOG, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Friday, January 27th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, AMLN triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t do much either way, but got halted midday on good news and gapped up nicely in the aftermarket:

SNCR triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In the Messenger, AMZN triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked great:

Rich’s ADBE triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

Rich’s FFIV triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s AMGN triggered long (without market support) and worked:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s LNKD triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, nflx, sncr, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, January 23rd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, PCAR triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

NTES triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, COST triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s PETS triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His SOHU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His WYNN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial before the market reversed sharply:

My NFLX triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich later had a separate NFLX short that triggered (with market support) and worked:

His SHLD triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 8 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, cost, nflx, pcar, shld, stock recap
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Thursday, January 19th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, JDSU gapped over, not play.
QCOM triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

LLTC triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

Same with SNDK:

In the Messenger, Rich’s NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s YOKU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all 4 worked clean and easy.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, qcom, stock recap, yoku
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Tuesday, January 17th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, CTCT triggered long (with market support) and worked:

ACXM gapped over the trigger, no play.
In the Messenger, Rich’s JPM triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His SHLD triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

His FSLR triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s FFIV triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

TEVA triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His MNST triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His PANL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His WYNN triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 4 did not.
Tags: AMZN, ctct, shld, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Sunday, January 8th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, ARIA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s NFLX triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

Rich’s SODA triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His PSMT triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Nothing else triggered as the afternoon got pretty slow.
In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, January 5th, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, BMRN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

ESRX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

NTRI triggered long (with market support) and did not work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

EBAY triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s DECK triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AZO triggered long (with market support) and worked:

COST triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 11 trades triggering with market support, 8 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, cost, deck, stock recap
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Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, TSCO triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s FAS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His GOOG triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His JPM triggered long (with market support) and went enough for a partial):

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked, nice start to 2012.
Tags: AMZN, gs, stock recap, tsco
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Wednesday, December 28th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Nothing triggered off of the report.
In the Messenger, AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked huge:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His JPM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His MCP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, stock recap
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Friday, December 16th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, WBMD triggered long (with market support) and literally did nothing, doesn’t count either way:

CTAS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

ARUN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

In the Messenger, AAPL triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

AMGN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s PRGO triggered long (without market support, was a play for S&P rebalancing) and ran a couple of points nicely:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked just great.
Tags: AMZN, arun, GOOG, prgo, stock recap
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Tuesday, December 13th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
In the report, TWTC gapped over, no play. INFA gapped under, no play.
In the Messenger, Rich’s AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked big:

His FMCN triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His BIDU triggered short (without market support) and worked huge:

SINA triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s SOHU triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked for a point:

Rich’s KLAC triggered short (with market support) and worked:

NTAP triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s LO triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His CLF triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His PCLN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

TEVA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 1 did not. There were a ton of shorts that went early that worked as well.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, clf, klac, pcln, stock recap
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Monday, December 12th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, CREE triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

VMED triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s FMCN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich added an additional CREE short that triggered (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all 4 of them worked.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, cree, fmcn, stock recap
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Thursday, December 1st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, COST triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

THRX triggered with ten minutes left, no play.
In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and went about $0.75:

RIMM triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s DECK triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

KLAC triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work initially, worked later:

TEVA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s LULU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

RIMM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 10 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, lulu, nflx, stock recap
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Monday, November 21st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SWKS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

CYOU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

ROVI gapped under the short trigger, no play.
In the Messenger, FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

NTAP triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AXP triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked (some very nice); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES 4 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, bidu, gs, stock recap
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Wednesday, November 16th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, MENT triggered long (with market support) and didn’t quite go enough for a partial:

VIVO triggered long by a penny (with market support) and didn’t work, but only traded 150,000 shares for the day, below what we like to see:

In the Messenger, we had two long calls on GOOG, the first triggered (with market support) and worked, the second triggered (with market support) and didn’t:

Rich’s AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked for over a point:

FSLR hit the Messenger after it triggered, so we won’t count it.
AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His NFLX triggered short (without market support) and worked huge:

His RIG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

RIMM triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s APA triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial before the market rolled:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, rimm, stock recap
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Monday, November 14th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SPLS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

CSTR gapped under the short trigger, no play.
In the Messenger, Rich’s CTRP triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His LVS triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked huge:

Rich’s SINA triggered long (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

COST triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s FMCN triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AIG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 3 did not. Under 50% for the first time in months, but not a surprise to see it on such a light volume day.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap
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Wednesday, November 9th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, PWRD gapped under the short trigger, no play. Nothing triggered.
In the Messenger, Rich’s GOOG triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

COST triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s AGU triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s FFIV triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His MDVN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His DOX triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, ffiv, sina, stock picks recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 8th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, NDAQ triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s GMCR triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

His SINA triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AIG triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s RGLD triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work initially, although I retook it in the room late:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, gmcr, gs, nflx, stock recap
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Friday, November 4th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, AREX and GPOR gapped over, no plays.
DRIV triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

BRCM triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

In the Messenger, GOOG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t really work:

Rich’s ARO triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work initially, worked later:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s JOYG triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

NTAP triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked (several worked very well); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, brcm, ntap, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 1st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, RIMM triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, Rich’s WYNN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His AAPL triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s LVS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His UA triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

TEVA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 10 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, nflx, stock recap, teva, wynn
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Friday, October 28th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, all four long ideas gapped over their triggers, no plays on any.
ATHN triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

IDCC triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AKAM triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s PCLN triggered short (with market support) and worked for two points, although it reversed very quickly:

His GMCR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s CF triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, all 6 of them worked. Perfect day.
Tags: AMZN, cf, gmcr, rimm, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 25th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, RVBD triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, Rich’s FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial, although it was tough to get:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked for a couple of points:

Rich’s UA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

NTAP triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s TSCO triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, fslr, GOOG, stock recap, tsco
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, October 24th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, BIIB triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial late in the session:

INTU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

CECO triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked great:

DISCA triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

BEAV triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work, although it went later:

In the Messenger, Rich’s JOYG triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

NFLX triggered short (without market support) and worked:

GOOG had two called triggers, the first triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work at A, the second triggered long (with market support) at B and worked:

Rich’s FFIV triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s PCLN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

I put in an additional and early BIIB intraday call that triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, ffiv, GOOG, stock repap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 18th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
In the report, GRMN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

MXIM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s COO triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, grmn, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 4th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, NVDA gapped under the trigger, no play.
CAVM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

CIEN, QLGC, RRD, HGSI, and LBTYA all gapped under their triggers, no plays.
BRKR triggered short (with market support and didn’t work):

In the Messenger, Rich’s GMCR triggered short (with market support) and worked for a point:

His RIMM triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work, although it worked on a follow-up trigger:

Rich’s FFIV triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s DECK triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s CLF triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked for over a point:

COST triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked for four points:

In total, that’s 11 trades triggering with market support, 9 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, amgn, AMZN, clf, cost, deck, stock recap
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Tuesday, September 27th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SIMO triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t do much:

DRIV and STEC gapped over their triggers, no plays.
In the Messenger, Rich’s FSLR triggered long (without market support) and worked for a quick point:

His IBM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked for a point:

His WYNN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked for over a point:

Rich’s CF triggered long (with market support) and worked for over a point:

Rich’s RIMM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked for a point before the market rolled:

GS triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s VMW triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s POT triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 11 trades triggering with market support, 10 of them worked, only 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, fslr, gs, stock recap, vmw
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Monday, September 26th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, ARUN gapped over, no play.
CREE triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

FMCN triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His LVS triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

COST triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

SINA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work, although it worked later:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 10 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 5 did not.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, gs, nflx, stock recap
Posted in Tradesight | No Comments »
Thursday, September 15th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SIMO triggered long (without market support) and didn’t do much:

CTSH triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

MLNX gapped over, no play.
CRUS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s VMW triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s UA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His CRM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, sina, stock recap
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Wednesday, August 31st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Here’s a day where we don’t officially count the top pick because it triggered in the opening five minutes, but you should have grabbed that as is always the case with any top pick.
From the report, MAKO triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked great:

SYMC triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked enough for a partial:

ORCL triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked great:

In the Messenger, Rich’s BIDU triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

NFLX triggered short (without market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s CF triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s CMG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked, and more nice winners without market support.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, bidu, cf, mako, stock recap
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Friday, August 26th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, ALXN triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked huge:

Rich’s DECK triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s LULU triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial, though it was fast:

Rich’s NFLX triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work, although it went later:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, stock recap
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Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, DISH triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked enough for a partial if you grabbed it:

QCOR triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work, then it triggered and worked:

His GS triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked huge, Rich also had a trigger on it in the afternoon that worked too:

NTAP triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s IBM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s RL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His JAZZ triggered long (with market support) and worked:

SINA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 8 of them worked (some HUGE); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES 1 did not.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, GOOG, jazz, rl, stock recap
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Monday, August 22nd, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, AMRN triggered short (with market support) and did not work:

GTAT triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMTD triggered short in the last few minutes of the session, so we don’t count that.
In the Messenger, AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

RIMM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s AZO triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His BTU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His VRTX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CF triggered long (without market support0 and worked:

His CMG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His SODA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

TEVA short triggered in the last few minutes, doesn’t count.
In total, that’s 10 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 4 did not.
Tags: AMZN, cmg, GOOG, soda, stock recap, vrtx
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Monday, August 15th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the reports, DTLK triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked about a point, enough for a partial:

It then triggered short (with market support after market rolled) and worked fine:

Rich’s VMW triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

KLAC triggered long (with market support) and worked:

NTAP triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His RIMM triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 1 did not. Several of the winners were very nice.
Tags: AMZN, fslr, klac, nflx, ntap, rimm, stock recap
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Friday, August 12th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Nothing off of the report triggered.
From the Messenger, Rich’s MCP triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s WYNN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His JAZZ triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His LULU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Several other calls, none triggered.
In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, mcp, stock recap
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Tuesday, August 9th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
No calls in the reports.
From the Messenger, Rich’s BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked fine for a couple of points:

Rich’s LNKD triggered long (with market support) and worked for a point (doesn’t look like much based on the scale of this chart, but it worked fine):

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s FFIV triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His BIIB triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CHTR triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His CAT triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CLF triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His APKT triggered short (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMGN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 13 trades triggering with market support, 11 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, bidu, biib, GOOG, stock recap
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Friday, August 5th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, ACOR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

PWRD triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

CREE triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

SYMC triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

TSLA triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

From the Messenger, Rich’s GMCR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked huge:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

DECK triggered short (with market support) and worked:

We had several calls for the afternoon and none of them triggered.
In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, all 9 of them worked.
Tags: AAPL, acor, AMZN, cree, fslr, gmcr, stock recap
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Thursday, August 4th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, NTAP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMLN triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s BIDU triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work, although it worked later:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

COST triggered long (without market support, although in a brief period where the market looked to be heading up) and worked:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked, it also triggered short later on a separate trigger and worked enough for a partial:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) but didn’t work initially, worked on a second attempt that we took, but we only count the first officially:

JPM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s VRTX triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

An additional NTAP short call triggered (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, cost, fslr, ntap, stock recap
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Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, INCY triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

PLCM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

ERTS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

SIAL triggered short (with market support) and worked huge:

In the Messenger, GOOG triggered long (without market support) and worked for over a point:

TEVA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMGN triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s SLB triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AMGN triggered short (with market support) late in the day and worked enough for a partial before running out of time:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked (several really nicely); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, sial, stock recap, teva
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Monday, August 1st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, VRTX triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

OVTI triggered short (with market support) and worked:

ROVI triggered short (with market support) and worked:

From the Messenger, AMZN triggered long (without market support) and worked:

COST triggered short (with market support) and worked:

NTES triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked huge:

Rich’s FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s NTAP triggered short (with market support) and worked:

KLAC triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s SOHU triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s CAT triggered long (without market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, all 9 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, cost, fslr, GOOG, ntap, sohu, stock recap
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Wednesday, July 27th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, IPXL triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

PDCO triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, AMGN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s NFLX triggered long (without market support) and worked for over a point, enough for an easy partial:

Rich’s HANS triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His SCHN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His PNRA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, all 8 of them worked, most of them very nicely.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, hans, pnra, rimm, sina, stock recap
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Tuesday, July 26th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, NTES triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

CTRP triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

TEVA triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, calls were light as the market was bifurcated and few patterns set up to my liking.
AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support and all three worked.
Tags: AMZN, ntes, stock picks, teva
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Tuesday, July 12th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, not much triggered, LEAP triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s DANG triggered long (with market support) and did not work:

His GS triggered short (without market support) and did not work, although it worked later:

CRM triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s JPM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and did not work (went about $0.50, might have gotten a partial, but not really enough under our rules for AMZN):

Rich’s AGU triggered long (with market support) and did not work:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

SINA triggered long (with market support) and did not work:

First day with less than 50% winners in a long time.
In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, only 2 of them worked, 5 did not. Bad session from that perspective.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap
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Friday, July 8th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
We had a lot of calls between the report and the Messenger, but amazingly, very few triggers with the gap and flat day (until late).
Nothing triggered off of the main report. From the Messenger, COST triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s only 1 trade triggering with market support, and it worked.
Tags: AMZN, cost, stock recap
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Wednesday, July 6th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, WYNN triggered long (without market support) and spiked about a point for a partial. It did work overall later in the session as the market came back:

TIBX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

FFIV triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, GOOG triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

Rich’s SINA triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

His NFLX triggered short (without market support) and went about $0.50:

His GS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

AKAM triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s afternoon RIMM call triggered short (without market support) and worked a little:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, rimm, stock recap, wynn
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Wednesday, June 29th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SCSS triggered long (without market support) and worked:

MPEL gapped over the trigger, no play.
PODD triggered long (with market support) and worked:

WFSL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s P triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His JPM triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked a little:

His GS triggered long (without market support) and worked huge:

His SOHU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AIG triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the afternoon, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (without market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked late:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, gs, nflx, stock recap
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Wednesday, June 15th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, EBAY triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work, but it did trigger short later with market support and worked:

From the Messenger, RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

SINA, a strange pattern for sure, triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s EBAY triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His FSLR triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His JNPR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial late in the session:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 1 didn’t.
Tags: AMZN, ebay, GOOG, rimm, sina, stock recap
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Tuesday, June 14th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, gapped over KITD, no play.
CTSH triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

Rich’s RENN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His DANG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His YOKU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His NFLX triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

RIMM triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

Rich’s CEO triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, bidu, dang, fslr, rimm, stock recap, yoku
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Monday, June 13th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
On a dull day in the market, most of the main triggers didn’t have a chance.
AUXL triggered short (with market support) late in the day and literally didn’t go more than a couple of cents either direction:

OVTI gapped under the trigger, no play.
QCOM triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

SINA triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked for a point:

Rich’s WFC triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked well, 3 did not. First day under 50% winners in several months, and of course it comes on the lightest volume day of that period.
Tags: AMZN, sina, stock recap
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Tuesday, June 7th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
A really nice day if I do say so myself with some good futures calls and also some nice stock winners despite the light market volume.
From the report, AKAM triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

PAAS triggered short (with market support, although it is a metals stock) and didn’t work:

BIDU triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a clean partial that we called in the Lab:

MELI triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

His FFIV triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

His JNPR triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Late day AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 3 did not.
Tags: AAPL, akam, AMZN, bidu, ffiv, stock recap
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Friday, June 3rd, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SINA triggered long (with market support) and didn’t really work considering it is over $100, although I did take a partial:

ISIL, URBN, and SANM gapped under their short triggers, no plays.
ETFC triggered in the last five minutes, no play.
ASIA triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Not surprisingly with a gap, the calls in the Messenger did better.
GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

EBAY triggered long (with market support) and did not work:

Rich’s TZOO triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s VMW triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 8 trades triggering with market support, 6 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, rimm, stock recap, vmw
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Wednesday, June 1st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, IACI (top pick) triggered long (with market support) and worked, although the market rolled over right after that:

MDAS triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

In the Messenger, BIDU triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked a little:

Rich’s VMW triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

Rich’s RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s TZOO triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked for a couple of points:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, GOOG, iaci, stock recap, tzoo
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Wednesday, May 25th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, JOYG triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes):

From the Messenger, Rich’s CF triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His RL triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

His AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and worked:

ERTS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GS triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all 4 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, bidu, cf, erts, stock recap
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Tuesday, May 17th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, AKAM triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

FWLT triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

PTEN triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

LPSN gapped under the trigger, no play.
In the Messenger, AMGN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial before dropping sharply:

FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work, although it worked later, but not on the initial trade:

Rich’s JPM triggered long (with market support) and worked, ran out of time:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 2 did not, nothing stellar.
Tags: AMZN, fwlt, jpm, stock recap
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Monday, May 16th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, WPRT triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s WYNN triggered short (without market support) and worked for a point:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked fine, but didn’t have much time:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, nflx, stock recap, wprt
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Sunday, May 8th, 2011
I get asked all of the time what the secret is to making money trading. The answer is simple, though not something people typically want to hear. If I had to pick one thing to teach new traders, I would say this: “Markets ebb and flow, but you need range, volume, and volatility to make money. The secret to success is that you have to stick around for those periods.”
When it comes to Stocks and Futures, success comes from volume in the markets, which typically leads to better volatility and ranges. Since these markets do measure volume, it becomes a fairly straight-forward process to analyze what is happening. This is why we analyze volume after 30 and 60 minutes each day…it tells you so much about your chances for success for the rest of the session.
Now, another way to view this from an “end of day” perspective is to look at NASDAQ volume daily. We like to see volume over 2 billion shares per day on the NASDAQ. Those are typically the “good” trading days. If you go back to the start of the year and view our “2010 Summary,” you’ll see that most of the last year so volume over 2 billion NASDAQ shares. However, this year, we’ve been hit or miss in that arena.
Here’s NASDAQ volume daily, and I’ve put a box around anything UNDER 2 billion shares since January, and you’ll notice that most of the days fall into that category:

So, even though we have had days well over 2 billion shares, they aren’t the norm, and this is a complete departure from what we are used to seeing. Having said that, markets aren’t always what we want or need them to be, and you have to trade what you get. The last month in particular was weak until this last week. As the chart above shows, the last week was the first week in a while that was consistently over 2 billion shares of daily volume, and we had some extremely easy trading, from futures to stocks to ETF calls. Lots of nice winners on those days.
Why is the volume back? Well, in prior weeks, we had concerns about the economy, the debt ceiling, unemployment, the US Dollar, the Fed, and quarterly earnings. With several of those items passed us this last week and gold and oil tanking, the markets picked up their volume (even though much of it was to the downside, which is fine for us as traders).
So let’s see what that means to range and volatility.
Here’s the intraday 10-minute bar data on the ES in the days PRIOR to this last week. I’ve drawn boxes around the ranges for each day because it makes it easier to see. Without volume, things were pretty flat overall, even if the market trended for several days:

Meanwhile, look at this week. With volume back, ranges were big, there was back and forth movement, and we did well:

Look at the last day on that chart, for example, and note that the move from the green dashed line at A to the red dashed line at B was AVERAGE DAILY RANGE, and then we exceeded that to the downside by a lot. In other words, with volume, we’re trading more than the averages.
This is very important to recognize and understand when putting together an annual trading system.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, education, es, etf, nasdaq
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Thursday, May 5th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, VRSK triggered long (with market support) and worked:

MRVL triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

ROSE gapped under the trigger, no play.
In the Messenger, Rich’s GPS triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

His GDOT triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His DDS triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

RIMM triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s GS triggered short (without market support) and worked:

BIDU triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

GS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 7 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, gs, stock recap
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Wednesday, May 4th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
A really nice trading session. From the report, THOR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

KLIC triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

LUFK triggered short (with market support) and worked:

CLNE triggered short (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s LVS triggered long (without market support) and worked fine:

NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

RIMM triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the afternoon, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 worked.
Tags: AMZN, lvs, rimm, stock recap
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Friday, April 29th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, NUVA triggered long (with market support) and worked:

TDSC triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s DECK triggered short (without market support) and worked:

His GT triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, all 3 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap
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Monday, April 18th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, IACI triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

SVNT triggered long (with market support) and worked:

STLD triggered short (with market support) and worked:

CSCO gapped under the short trigger, no play.
In the Messenger, Rich’s NFLX triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His CAT triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

In the afternoon, my FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked great, all the way up to the gap fill:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked, several extremely well.
Tags: AMZN, fslr, iaci, stld, stock recap, svnt
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Thursday, April 14th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, VRUS triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

LRCX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

PSEC gapped under the short trigger, no play.
In the Messenger, ERTS triggered long (with market support) and worked, took all day:

AXP triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s FNSR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His AMT triggered long (with market support) and literally went sideways, nothing either way:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, fnsr, lrcx, stock recap
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Wednesday, April 13th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
No triggers off of the main report.
From the Messenger, Rich’s JPM triggered short (with market support) and worked nice:

Rich’s RIMM triggered long (with market support for the 1-minute bar that it triggered) and worked great:

Rich’s NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, all 4 of them worked.
Tags: AMZN, jpm, nflx, rimm, stock recap
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Tuesday, April 12th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, JDSU triggered short (without market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AMZN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

His FCX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His HANS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial with no risk:

His AMGN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

BIDU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, fcx, stock recap
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Thursday, April 7th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, PLCE triggered long (without market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked:

CDNS triggered long (with market support) and went enough for a partial but that was it:

From the Messenger, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked:

BIDU triggered long (without market support) and didn’t go anywhere:

KLAC triggered short (with market support) and worked:

There were several other calls but they didn’t trigger.
In total, that’s 5 trades triggering with market support, all 5 of them worked, plus PLCE worked and it was the top pick, just triggered in the opening 5.
Tags: AMZN, plce, stock recap
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Friday, April 1st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, QLGC gapped over, no play.
ASIA triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t do much, triggered later and worked:

CHKP triggered long (with market support) and worked:

BRKS triggered long (without market support) and worked:

BRCM triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work initially, worked later when the market rolled:

In the Messenger, Rich’s BRCM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His SLB triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

His GS triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

RIMM triggered short (without market support) and did not work:

AAPL in the afternoon triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, 1 did not. But note that the best volume day of the week gave us the best results in terms of movement by far.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, GOOG, rimm, stock recap
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Tuesday, March 29th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, LPSN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL call triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

His AMZN call triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Another AMZN call triggered long (with market support) and worked:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and did not work initially:

Rich’s PCLN triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 5 of them worked, and one did not which is really unique on a day where market volume was so light.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, lpsn, pcln, stock recap
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Thursday, March 24th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, OPEN gapped over the trigger so no official play, but it did pull back and fill the gap and then triggered with market support, which is perfectly valid for traders to take under our system:

SFSF just gapped over the trigger, no play, never gave a valid setup to take later (didn’t fill the gap).
GILD triggered long (with market support) and worked:

SINA also gapped, then filled, then triggered and worked:

LEAP triggered long (with market support) and worked:

FOSL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s ROST triggered long (without market support) and worked (over a 5-minute bar high, which triggered in the third bar):

Rich’s SLW triggered short (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and didn’t work, although it worked later and he had an adder in the Messenger:

Rich’s KLAC triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

RIMM triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, and all 6 worked.
Tags: AMZN, klac, open, rimm, stock recap
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Thursday, March 17th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, a couple of the longs gapped over, no play.
NUVA triggered short (with market support) and worked enough:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked about a point for a partial. Also triggered again later and worked:

GOOG triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

NFLX triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work. Triggered again later (with market support) and worked:

ERTS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 2 did not. Two retriggers worked after sweeps that did not.
Tags: AMZN, stock recap
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Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, AEIS triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

OVTI gapped under the short trigger, no play.
ONNN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AKAM triggered short (with market support) and worked:

BRCM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work if you kept a stop to $0.15 or so, but otherwise, it did (we will count it as a loser):

DNDN triggered short (with market support) and did not work:

MIPS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

LEAP triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Meanwhile, in the Messenger, AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

GS triggered long (market direction was dead neutral at the time); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES worked a bit, I sold it flat, we won’t count it:

In total, that’s 9 trades triggering with market support, 7 of them worked, only 2 did not.
Tags: AMZN, fslr, leap, mips, stock recap
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Friday, February 18th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, RMBS triggered long (with market support) and didn’t go ten cents either way, so no gain or loss counted:

REXX triggered short (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked, but you had to be ready to grab it at the open:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

GOOG triggered long (with market support) and worked:

My big winner of the day was AMZN, triggered long (with market support) and worked great and very technically:

Rich’s NTAP triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not. Nice day.
Tags: AMZN, GOOG, ntap, stock recap
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Friday, February 4th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Off the report, VRSN triggered long (with market support) and worked huge:

In the Messenger, AAPL triggered long (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and worked fine:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work on the trigger, although valid again and worked:

AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s CSTR triggered short (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, and 1 did not.
Tags: aig, AMZN, stock recap, vrsn
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Tuesday, February 1st, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SOHU triggered long (without market support due to the opening 5 minutes) and worked huge all day:

EXXI triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s DANG triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s MCP triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In total, that’s 4 trades triggering with market support, 3 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, dang, mcp, sohu, stock recap
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Tuesday, January 18th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Off the report, FULT triggered right at the close, so it doesn’t count either way.
FSLR triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work, but the retrigger later (with market support) worked great, big winner:

PPDI triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

VCLK triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, AMZN triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

CAT and EBAY triggered long very late in the day and didn’t have time to go more than a dime, so we won’t count them.
In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 1 did not.
Tags: AMZN, ppdi, stock recap
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Monday, January 10th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
XRTX triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial and held in the money:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL short triggered (without market support) and didn’t work:

My NFLX long triggered (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and worked huge:

Rich’s REE triggered long (without market support) and doesn’t count either way because it didn’t go even ten cents in either direction:

My AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

Rich’s MS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

My GS triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 3 trades triggering with market support, 2 of them worked, 1 did not. The bigger winners were actually in NFLX and AMZN.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, stock recap
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Wednesday, January 5th, 2011
Every year, at the end of the year, we recap the market action for the just-completed year and discuss how our various services did. If you go back and look at prior year-end reports, I would say that we have done a fairly good job of anticipating what the year ahead holds as well.
For example, at the end of 2007, with oil rising above $80 a barrel and holding for the first time, we predicted a sharp decline and rocky 2008. That of course later turned into the banking collapse late in the year, which certainly was more extreme than we had in mind, but nevertheless, the prediction was a good one.
At the end of 2008, with the stimulus bill just passed and a new administration in town and the VIX just hitting a record spike, we predicted that 2009 would be one of the strongest up years in history, rivaling years like 1932 and 1933 when the government finally took steps to try to rectify the Great Depression. 2009 ended up being a huge year to the upside, and our calls did well again.
At the end of 2009, our goals for 2010 were much more moderate. We were looking for a small pause in January, another push higher, a 20% correction at some point in the year, and then a strong back end of the year, “hopefully with about a 35% push up.”
How did those items play out? Let’s look at our favorite index, the NASDAQ 100 (NDX):

Pretty much got everything we wanted along with a modest 17% rise for the year on the index overall. No complaints.
The broader S&P 500 index was a little more moderate, showing a 10.5% gain for the year:

While things have settled down to more “normal” market returns after the run of 2009, there’s nothing to complain about here on the stock market side.
As I go through the rest of the various index charts, I’ve drawn a line from the start of the year to the end so you can see the net gain/loss.
The SOX performed well:

As did the Biotechs:

Banks finally had a decent year, although it should be noted that they did NOT close out at the high of the year like just about every other equity index did:

Part of what kept this year from posting a better rebound was the European debt crisis, which amplified during the middle of the year and definitely caused some concerns. This had an impact on gold, which we don’t really trade, but clearly didn’t create the bubble burst that we had been looking for coming into the year:

I will say this. If you look at a weekly chart of gold, the higher it goes, the worse the ultimate breakdown will be at some point, just like oil in 2008. The fact that it is a commodity doesn’t change the concept:

Treasuries barely made out a positive year after rallying harder mid-year during the peak of the European concerns:

Oil also was higher, although it had the narrowest range in five years ($20 a barrel in range):

It’s also stuck around the 50% retracement of the collapse in 2008:

Oil will be important to watch in 2011. The “new normal” for oil after the last three years is that $100 a barrel is the “danger zone” that can again impact the global economy. Unless we start to see a bigger shift away from oil to other energy resources that meet our global needs, oil over $100 a barrel will be bad news and could be yet another major factor (there are several, we will discuss below) that could hurt the economy.
Before we get into Forex, let’s look briefly at some of the key stocks that we trade regularly did for the year.
AAPL remains my favorite trader, although it accounted for only 18% of my trades, which is a sharp drop from the last two years, owing more to the fact that there are other great active vehicles. It certainly had an up year and might suffer a bit in January as people can finally sell in 2011 and not pay taxes until 2012:

GOOG is another favorite, and while it remained great from a trading perspective, it had a down year, which is interesting to note. If this is a base, be on the long side of it when it breaks out:

AMZN rose in my list and had a strong up year:

RIMM suffered some issues as the Blackberry OS lost market share to Android in particular, but it still has great trading moment:

The real newbie from an active trading perspective was NFLX, which posted a massive 300% year and started trading much higher volume, making it a great intraday trader. This one benefits finally from Blockbuster getting the final nail in the coffin:

So how was the Forex market this year? In last year’s report, I said that we had more confidence that the US Dollar Index would post an up year and ultimately hit the 84-86 level. That move happened much earlier in the year than we were expecting as the Dollar was looking very strong right up until the European crisis really kicked in:

The Dollar still posted a positive year and if you back out the chart more, it is significantly higher than the low in the summer of 2008 as the banking crisis came into full swing (despite the fact that the news media has spent the last two years talking about the US Dollar getting weaker). You can also see that it now has a specific uptrend line in place from 4 points over two and a half years, although there is also a declining trendline in the shorter term, giving us a total wedge:

Those lines will be important to watch.
Looking back at the US Dollar daily chart, from a trading perspective, we like to see good ranges AND good movement for the majority of the year in Forex. Extended periods of flat and/or extended periods of lower ranges make trading more difficult. Here’s the chart again:

As you can see, this year started out terrific, with a big move up (and great ranges) from January through May and then a big move back down through the end of July. August and September were much slower and flatter (both had about two days that accounted for the whole move of the month); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES which is common for those late summer months. Things resumed in late September and continued until the last three weeks of the year, when the Holidays kicked in.
Overall, I mark this as a great year in Forex, better than the last two, as the only points where things slowed down were the ones based on seasonality that we see each year (August, September, December). Most of the rest of the year saw both decent ranges AND some actual price movement.
Average Daily Ranges on the pairs changes quite a bit during the year. The EURUSD increased. One year ago, the six-month trailing ADR was 133 pips a day. It’s currently around 155 pips. We also saw increases in the AUDUSD and NZDUSD. However, the GBPUSD dropped from 182 pips a year ago to 155 today, making it an equal trader (if slightly more expensive) to the EURUSD. Something like the GBPJPY dropped from 232 pips per day to only 155, which is a major shift downward for the cross pairs.
Expect to see a bigger range of calls this year with the EURUSD, AUDUSD, and NZDUSD called more frequently. Over 85% of our main calls in 2010 were on the GBPUSD. We did start actually tracking our results for our main Forex calls (which really shouldn’t be the sum of how you use the Levels if you have been trained properly) in September. Next year, we’ll have a full year of results, but for now, let’s just use the fourth quarter net to keep things rounded. From October 1 to December 31, there were 102 Forex calls in the Messenger that triggered. 57 worked for some gain, which is 54.2%. The net pips using the entries (adjusting for spreads); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES initial stops, first targets, and adjusted stops for those that triggered was 1045 pips. Nothing to sneeze at.
If every year in Forex looked like this one, particularly the first half of this year, then we’d all be happy. Overall, the net results of the entire year should be over 5000 pips, and I may even go back through all of the calls at some point and get the exact number.
How did our stock trading go? Another great year. We continue to find daily patterns that work great while also giving almost daily calls in the top traders that work. Now that we put our daily results into the free Blog part of the site for all to see, there are people tracking the results. Evidently, we’re hitting between 65-70% winners, and that doesn’t account for the fact that our losers are kept very tight and some of our winners run big.
One big factor for successful trading is always volume. We like to see the NASDAQ trade 2 billion shares a day or more, and while things typically lighten up in the summer, we definitely saw a “tale of two markets” from a volume perspective this year.
Here’s the day-by-day NASDAQ volume chart with a 10-day moving average line, and you can see that for the first half of the year, the average never really dipped under 2 billion, and we had a lot of days between 2 and 3 billion, with a peak day of 4.2 billion. That’s all great. Things dipped in the summer, and while we had many days between 2 and 2.5 billion after that, the moving average struggled around that 2 billion share mark, and then dropped off sharply as usual for the last weeks of the year:

In general, another great year for Tradesight, and we have made some site changes to put a lot of our results more “front and center” going forward.
So what’s the outlook for 2011? Murky. Much more murky than the last three years. While the line “don’t fight the Fed” continues to be strongest, I have a much lower outlook for the year in general. In the end, we’re traders, and we do a good job of monitoring market direction both in a broader sense but also in an intraday sense, which really is what matters most if you are a trader. There are certainly a lot of obstacles ahead that might be relative unknowns going forward, including:
Europe – What would a complete breakdown in the Euro do
The US Debt Ceiling – Not an issue unless someone is crazy enough not to raise it
Taxes – Need to go up at some point in some fashion if you want to fix our books as spending cuts alone can’t make the difference
The Deficit – This is clearly the big one and whether 2011 will be the year that kills the market from the deficit or not remains to be seen
Oil – Anything over $100 a barrel is a problem
Metals – Gold and others aren’t just an investment tool, which is something that I think a lot of people forget. They are used in Electronics and Semiconductors, and there is a global supply and demand for this that drives the price as well, and that demand is high, but at some level, the prices push end-goods out of reach
From a trading perspective, volume will determine how well we do. You only have to look at the last week of 2010, where volume dropped to an average of only 1 billion NASDAQ shares a day and nothing moved, to see how important volume is. Unlike about 8 out of the last 10 years where I was confident in my outlook, I’m not there right now for 2011. Obviously, we’ll have up and down periods, and I suspect the volatility will be good with all of the potential news on the landscape, and that alone could be enough. If someone put a gun to my head and said “Will the year be green or red in the end,” I think I’d probably pick red, but again, that does something that you’re never supposed to do in the markets: Fight the Fed.
With QE2 out there and interest rates likely to remain low, savings finally slowing (which means people are spending); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES and signs that construction spending is on the mend, there are certainly positive inclinations out there about the economy, but it is very possible that the markets have already factored them in and there are too many things that could “ruin” the recovery for any significant rise from here. A lot of people don’t like QE and QE2, but the reality is that they are designed to cushion the blow and give up some of the longer term “bubble gains” that we might get down the road while preventing a worse catastrophe up front.
Unemployment is always the lagging indicator and should not be viewed as what is going on in the economy. There’s no doubt that even the deeper version of unemployment data have not reached the Levels that they did in the Great Depression, but the loss of jobs in 2007 and 2008 has not recovered, as it was the deepest decline in 40 years. I have said before and I will say again now: My bigger concerns about unemployment is that we have outsourced so many jobs that we might end up in a position where the economy can run at a 3-4% GDP growth rate, the stock market can run, a lot of people will get rich, and corporations will be profitable, but unemployment won’t drop much. I’ve said before that we might need to get used to a headline 8% rate as the “new norm” in a couple of years.
So, I don’t use it as the measure of what is going to happen in the stock market. If you did, the stock market should be about 50% lower than where it is. Fed trumps unemployment data because one is a controlling factor and one is a short term symptom of the problem.
What I do hope for in 2011 is that we have the 20-25% pullback and the 20-25% runs that make for great trading environments, and I suspect that we will get that. Watch for March to be a key month as the government hits the Debt Ceiling limit. Any move toward defaulting on the full faith and credit of the US government after over 200 years or any move that results in a government shutdown would bring spending to a halt, and probably kill a couple of years of economic growth in the process. These are all important factors in the activity of the stock market, and even the Forex market. A professional trader has recognize this and be on the lookout.
Have a great 2011 and thanks for stopping by.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, daytrading, es, forex recap, gold, GOOG, oil, rimm, stocks recap
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Tuesday, January 4th, 2011
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, SAFM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t go ten cents against or twenty cents in favor, closing right at the trigger, so we don’t count it as a winner or loser:

In the Messenger calls, FSLR triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES worked enough for a partial the first time, and triggered again and worked better after the market accelerated to the downside:

Rich’s MCP triggered short (with market support) and worked over $0.50 quick for a partial:

Rich’s POT triggered short (with market support) and also worked enough for an easy partial, although the bigger gain was later:

Rich’s NFLX triggered long (without market support) and worked for a couple of points as well:

Rich’s BRCM triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

In total, that’s 6 trades triggering with market support, 4 of them worked, 1 did not, and 1 didn’t move enough to count it either way.
Tags: AMZN, nflx, stock recap
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Wednesday, December 29th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, FULT finally triggered (with market support) and was working but everything is slow:

XLNX triggered long (with market support) by a penny and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s REE triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work:

My AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Several other calls but nothing else triggered in a narrow day with the lightest range yet. That’s just three triggers with market support, two worked and one didn’t.
Tags: AMZN, es, gold, stock recap
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Monday, December 27th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early. From the report, CSTR triggered short (without market support) and worked well on a spike, but then came back: CAKE triggered short (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and worked just enough for a partial: SYMC triggered short (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and didn’t work: In the Messenger, AMZN triggered short (without market support) and worked great: Rich’s CMG triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work the first time: His BIDU triggered short (without market support) and worked: His AAPL triggered short (without market support) and worked great: His GM triggered long (with market support) and worked: So there were a lot of triggers, but most without market support (though NQ’s were down while ES was up). Only one triggered with market support, and it worked fine.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, stock recap
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Monday, December 13th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
SNDK triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked enough for an easy partial:

HANS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, AMGN triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked great all day:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His FFIV triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CMG triggered short (without market support in this case, went a little early before the market rolled) and it worked great anyway:

His AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Add it up and you get six trades that triggered with market support, and all of them worked.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, daytrading, es, stock recap
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Thursday, December 9th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, FITB triggered (without market support) and didn’t work:

ZION triggered long (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and ended up working later in the day, but with a shaky start:

ASBC gapped over the trigger, so no play, which is unfortunate because it worked great after that.
NTES triggered short (with market support) and did not work:

CEPH triggered short (without market support due to the opening five minutes) and worked great:

The Messenger calls were much more exciting.
Rich’s VMW triggered short (without market support due to the opening five minutes, but it triggered again later with market support and worked great):

His NFLX short triggered (with market support) and worked great:

His FCX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

My GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) in the afternoon and didn’t work (market turned back up right after):

That’s seven triggers with market support. Five worked great, two didn’t work.
Tags: AMZN, es, stock recap
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Monday, December 6th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, RMBS gapped way over the trigger, no play.
KIRK triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

CTCM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, RIMM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Again, with the market so flat, you shouldn’t have been pushing anything today. Technically, we had four triggers with market support, and only two worked at all.
Tags: AMZN, daytrading, es, gold, nflx, stock recap
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Friday, December 3rd, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, the top pick in GNTX triggered long (with market support) and worked beyond great:

TTWO triggered long (with market support) and worked:

ISIL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

LIFE triggered long (with market support) and worked:

VPRT triggered long (with market support) and worked:

LLEN triggered long (with market support) and worked great too:

CENX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t do anything at all, but didn’t go against either:

In the Messenger, AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s NFLX triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

That brings us a total of 8 triggers with market support, 7 worked great and 1 barely moved. Just a great session.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, daytrading, es, gntx, stock recap
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Thursday, December 2nd, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Off the report, SNDK triggered (no market support due to opening 5 minutes) and didn’t work, but it triggered later (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s NYX triggered long (no market support due to opening 5 minutes) and worked great:

AXP triggered long (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (without market support) and didn’t work the first time, worked the second:

PWER triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

CMC triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s RIMM triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial only:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

All told, that’s 5 triggers with market support, and all five worked, some of them very nice. Huge day.
Tags: AMZN, es, fslr, stock recap
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Wednesday, November 24th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
PDCO triggered long (with market support) and went enough for a partial on a spike, but that was it:

REGN triggered long (without market support) and worked great:

OPEN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work the first time, worked great later:

In the Messenger, NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked:

BIIB triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

In total, five for five with market support.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, es, stock recap, Tradesight
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Sunday, November 21st, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
ESRX triggered long (with market support) and worked fine:

MXIM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

OVTI triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s BIDU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t really work:

His FCX, however, triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

GOOG triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s CRM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His NTAP triggered late in the day without market support and only went a dime, so it’s a wash, no harm, no good.
In total, that’s six triggers with market support, and five worked. Several worked really nice. Very good for options expiration.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, daytrading, stock recap
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Wednesday, November 10th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
From the report, AEIS (with market support) didn’t do anything either way:

THOR short (with market support) didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) didn’t work:

But the later trigger in AAPL at a lower price (with market support) worked enough for a gain:

Rich’s PCLN short (with market support) worked great:

Rich’s LVS (with market support) worked great:

The afternoon AAPL long (with market support) worked enough for a partial:

But the AMGN long (with market support) didn’t:

And the AMZN long (with market support) was a dead even wash:

So that totals up eight triggers with market support, 2 of which literally did nothing either way. The others were split, 3 worked and 3 didn’t.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, daytrading, es, stock recap
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Tuesday, November 9th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Amazingly, nothing triggered off of the report.
In the Messenger, GS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s NFLX triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AMGN triggered short (with market support) and worked, although it didn’t go far:

Rich’s MEE triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and didn’t do much, but certainly didn’t go against the trade:

Rich’s SLW triggered short (with market support) and worked:

So six trades triggered with market directional support at the time of the trigger, and all six worked.
Tags: amgn, AMZN, daytrading, stock recap
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Monday, November 8th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
Off of the report, we had several trades trigger in the opening five minutes, so they had no market support as it is not yet determined.
WBSN (without market support in the opening 5 minutes) triggered long and worked:

GXDX (without market support) triggered long and didn’t work, but it held in the money for hours to give you time to adjust stop tight or get out:

LULU (without market support in the opening five minutes) triggered long and worked:

DNDN (without market support in the opening five minutes) triggered short and worked:

In the Messenger, AMZN (with market support) triggered short and worked:

Rich’s LVS (with market support) triggered long and worked:

RIMM (without market support) triggered long and eventually worked, technically swept it once first, no market support either way:

Rich’s MEE short (without market support) triggered and worked:

Rich’s AKAM long (with market support) didn’t work:

AMZN long (with market support) worked enough for a partial:

So a lot of trades triggered, and the ones off of the report worked great. However, due to a fairly flat day and some very early triggers, only 4 trades triggered with market support. Three of those worked.
Tags: AMZN, daytrading, es, NQ, stockrecap
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Wednesday, October 27th, 2010
With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.
VRTX triggered (without market support) but ended up working fine once the market did turn up in the afternoon:

ASIA triggered long (with market support) and worked for more than an easy partial:

PRWD triggered (without market support) and didn’t work:

CAVM triggered (without market support since it was in the first 5 minutes of play) and worked, including a huge move in the afternoon:

ADTN triggered short (without market support) and worked, especially once the market turned to the downside a little later:

In the Messenger, AMGN triggered (with market support) and didn’t work (we need $0.20 for a partial, didn’t quite get there):

COST triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s EQIX triggered short (with market support) and worked for $0.50, an easy partial:

His NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His FCX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

A beautiful pattern in EBAY waited until the last 6 minutes to trigger, so we won’t count it:

No other calls triggered. That totals seven trades that triggered with market support (those are typically the ones we suggest taking) and six worked at least for a partial, most of them much better.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, daytrading, es, mb trading, stocks, Tradesight
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Tuesday, October 26th, 2010
Off the report, ROST triggered (with market support) and went enough for a partial but that was it:

GPRE (with market support) did a little better and stayed in the money all day:

AVGO (with market support) also worked fine:

TIVO (with market support) didn’t work:

GSIC (with market support) worked:

XRAY (with market support) didn’t work:

MBFI (without market support) didn’t work:

In the Messenger, COST (with market support) worked:

FSLR (with market support) didn’t work:

AIG (with market support) triggered very late, worked, but didn’t have time to do much:

AMZN (with market support) worked enough for a partial:

As usual, we sum it up comparing the win/loss ratio on the trades that triggered WITH market support. Ten trades triggered with market support. Seven of them worked, three did not. Only a couple of the trades went far in a dull day in the market after the first hour.
Tags: AMZN, daytrading, stocks
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Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
Here’s a list of all of our picks for the stock service from Wednesday, October 20. Each is denoted as triggering with or without market support. Tradesight recommends taking trades with market support. We were 7 for 7 today in those trades.
Off of the report, only NDAQ (with market support) worked, no risk, but barely made it $0.20:

In the Messenger, RIMM (with market support) worked:

Rich’s CREE (with market support) worked:

Rich’s AAPL (without market support) short didn’t work:

Rich’s GOOG (with market support) worked for 3 points:

My AMZN (without market support) didn’t work:

My AMGN (with market support) went enough for a partial:

Rich’s WYNN short (without market support) worked for over a point:

Rich’s AMLN (with market support) worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s AAPL short (without market support) worked for over a point:

And GS long (with market support) was working but ran out of time, so just enough for a partial:

All told, that’s seven triggers with market directional support, which are the ones that we take. Three worked great, four worked enough for partials. None of the seven didn’t work.
Tags: AAPL, AMZN, es, futures, stocks, trading
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Thursday, September 23rd, 2010
NVDA opened just above the trigger, so no play, but worked great.
ESRX worked:

AMCC gapped under the trigger, filled the gap, then triggered and worked:

ATLS gapped under the trigger, no play.
CHKP gapped down but opened just above the trigger, swept, and that was that:

In the Messenger, AAPL worked great:

AMZN worked great:

BIIB worked:

Rich’s LVS short worked:

His AAPL short in the afternoon worked for almost a point:

Tags: AAPL, AMZN, market, stocks, trading
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