Anyway, this book is not about penny stock trading and certainly not about illegal practices. Rather, I want to show the reader how to benefit from extreme movements as well, provided he overcomes his fear of doing the opposite of what the herd is doing.
For example, if a market runs to the north for seven hours, and there are the first signs that the buyers are running out of cash (losing momentum), then you can be sure that I am on the other side of the trade. I am short. And honestly, doing this is scary. Sometimes you might be a little bit scared, sometimes really scared. I am no exception. I am scared too. If the whole market is long, and you have a short position, then you really feel that you are alive.
Conversely, it is the same. If the market has fallen all day due to some event, and everyone is short, then you can assume that I am long. And this position scares me too. Me against the rest of the world. That is what this book is about: Me against the rest of the world.
I would not talk about these snapback trades if I did not believe there is a robust trading strategy behind this method. Otherwise, what I am sharing here would be worthless. I would like to make it clear again, that this method is not my invention, but has always been used by smart traders worldwide. Maybe you have not heard of it yet, because those people do not make a fuss about their business. These traders have internalized the method of taking the opposite position of extreme movements, so that they no longer have to think about it. They go short just when the mass of traders do not even dream of going short; if they go short at all (we know that only 1% of investors go short at all).
Most people just need some kind of "confirmation" that the market has turned and that they should now trade in the other direction. Some might say they need "a signal" to go long or short. There is an entire stock market industry that thrives on delivering such "signals" to inexperienced traders. If you intend to subscribe to such a "signal service", you will lose on the longer term. Believe me, I tried it several times in my early days and always fell on my nose.
Why? Because when the "signal" comes, the opportunity has already gone. Those signals usually come too late. Think about it: first, the analyst must recognize the signal on the chart. This happens when his indicators give him one. This is mostly when the market has already turned and has gone a bit the other way. Then the analyst (who, by the way, does not act on his own signals - he leaves this to the readers of his signal letter) goes to the computer and begins to write an exciting report, stating that his indicators have given him a significant signal. As a rule, some hours have already passed. If he then writes his report in the mailing list, and finally clicks on "send", several hours have passed before you get the mail. Depending on the size of the signal service, the readers start to buy and eventually, so do you. Think about it. Not everyone is at the start of the food chain.
The reader may already guess it. If you always wait for confirmation, the caravan will already have moved on. If you get into the market then, you usually get a much worse price than if you had bought, for example, when the market was completely down. That is self-explanatory, one should think. The old German stock market expert Andre Kostolany summarized it aptly: “You have to buy when blood flows in the streets.” Actually, this saying is the expression of common sense itself. The questions I ask are: “Why is it so hard for traders to put this stock market wisdom into practice? And why are many traders so scared to buy when blood flows in the streets? And why are so scared to go short when the rest of the world is long?”
The claim that I make in this book is simple, but very direct: if you do not experience fear when trading, then the position is probably not worth taking.
In other words, trade only when you are scared.