In figure 1, you see the example of a market that was stretched quite far. It literally crashed after it had shot up like a rocket, as if there were no limits. At least, that was what the optimistic crypto traders thought, dreaming of even higher prices.
This chart reminds me of the times of the dotcom bubble in 2000. Thousands of new "traders" also appeared out of nowhere, thinking that the laws of gravity had been rejected. Any experienced stock trader knows that it is only a matter of time before the house of cards collapses. That was the case after the dotcom bubble. It happened with the crypto-currencies, and it will always be like that where a market screws up, as if Newton’s laws suddenly no longer apply. This phenomenon is the topic of this book. I want to explore market situations that are just screaming for the rubber band to snap back.
Anyone who read my scalping books will recognize the setup. I am one of those traders who does not try to predict major market moves (a specialty of analysts). I cannot predict such movements as much as I would like, so I certainly do not try. What I can very well expect, is that after an extreme movement, I usually can expect a countermovement, a correction. My method builds on this logic.
There have always been traders who have been trading with the snapback method, or a variant of it. For example, some traders specialize in trading extreme moves in smaller stocks, so called penny stocks. Especially, if those traders are capable of going short in "overhyped" penny stocks.
Newsletter writers like to recommend certain penny stocks for their readers. They impress the readers of the letter with a very positive story about this small company. The readers call their broker and buy all the available stocks, which usually cost only a few cents on the stock market. That is why they are called penny stocks. Of course, it gets tight quickly in such a tiny “market”. Soon the readers will buy up the order book of this stock completely. The result is, the stock starts to rise massively. Price increases of 100 or 200% within two or three days are quite usual. Such an exaggeration inevitably brings snapback traders, who specialize in shorting such stocks, onto the scene. They try to build short positions the moment the momentum in the stock ends. Everybody has bought and is sitting on profits. The first ones are starting to take their profits, putting the stock under pressure. When the short sellers enter into the stock, more pressure comes in. Not infrequently, the stock crashes completely, often even deeper than where it was a few days earlier, when the stock was recommended by the newsletter. Needless to say, clever snapback traders are the ones who are making a decent profit here. Not the “readers – investors”. However, they have to be careful, because they may be wrong with their timing, and the stock might go up further for a while. If, in this case, the snapback trader does not take his losses quickly, he may experience a bigger loss.
There have always been scammers (quite often the publishers of those penny stock market bulletins themselves), who had previously bought the stocks before they recommended it in their stock market letter. When their "readers-investors" start to buy, they change suddenly to the seller side. That way, they benefit twice. No, three times. First, they make money with the subscriptions of their stock market letters (a profitable business!). Then they make money when the stock starts to rise. Finally, yet importantly, when the house of cards collapses, they often make money by building short positions. These people actually trade against their own readers of their stock market letters. Most of this happens through some straw men.
This practice is illegal. There have been spectacular condemnations in the past. Moreover, although everyone knows that regulators can identify this kind of fraud, surprisingly, there have always been individuals who have done it. If you want to know how it works and have some fun, all you need to do is watch the movie "The Wolf of Wall Street" with Leonardo DiCaprio. This movie shows how well this practice works. However, the film is set in the eighties, where the "dummies", so the “readers-investors” of the news bulletin, were lured on the phone. Of course, today it happens via email. But the principle has always remained the same.