Trading Stocks using Chart Patterns
Trading Stocks using Chart Patterns
BRIAN B. KIM
Copyright © 2014 Brian B. Kim
All rights reserved.
ISBN-10: 0990908909
ISBN-13: 978-0-9909089-0-6
For my family.
CONTENTS
A FRIENDLY INTRODUCTION
1
CHAPTER 3
Emotional Detachment and
Acknowledging Our Limitations
Peter Bernstein
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The point is not to have more winning trades than losing trades. The point
is to have several $100 winners swamp many more $10 losers.
In short, we have to be willing to fail, and fail often. If we think
about it, we cannot accomplish anything worthwhile in life without being
open to failure. Let me stress the following: I am not saying that we have to
risk financial ruin to be a successful trader. Quite the contrary. As I have
said and will repeat many times throughout the book, traders’ first and only
priority is financial survival by keeping their trading capital intact through
even lengthy losing streaks to be able to bet on advantageous trade set-ups
after gaining experience. I repeat: I do not mean bankruptcy when I say a
trader must be willing to fail. Successful trading is about being wrong and
losing money on many trades and yet being profitable overall because the
losses are only a small fraction of our capital.
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as I do, then by all means apply yourself diligently and with purpose to
become an investor, trader, or whatever kind of market participant you
wish to be. But do not let the markets become a destructive obsession.
There are so many more things in life that are far more important.
Diversify financially
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Diversify mentally
Ironically, not caring so much and thus trading with detachment is likely to
make us better traders. Experienced and skilled traders know that even a
string of losses results in only a small drawdown of their capital if they
strictly limit their risk. Thus, they do not worry about every dollar and do
not obsess over getting out of a bad trade only after breaking even. They
quickly cut their losses and move onto better opportunities. They remain
calm through winning and losing streaks. They are not too excited about
profits nor anguished by losses. They focus on trading well and cutting
losses on the next 1000 trades and beyond. This virtuous cycle is every
trader’s goal.
In short, not caring so much about the outcome of any individual
trade is the second crucial foundation that complements risk
management in the trader’s toolkit.
By all means traders should put much effort into studying the markets
and controlling their emotions. We must exercise strict discipline to trade
only compelling set-ups. But after all the preparation, study, and
deliberation, we have to let go. We have to say to ourselves and believe, “I
am bigger than this trade. My life is much more than how this trade turns
out or even whether I succeed as a trader.” This exercise is not just a mental
trick to make us better traders. It is the truth. Do we want our lives to be
defined by a series of trades, no matter how profitable? Or even a lifetime of
successful trading? Do we really think we are a failure if we don’t succeed as
a trader? It would indeed be a low bar to define our life based on a series of
trades or whether we make it as a trader. We have a much better chance of
succeeding as traders if we don’t make it our sole occupation, passion, and
interest.
I often think a 5th grader could be a formidable classical chartist likely
to outperform most adult traders. The kid hunts for well-formed chart
patterns and picks one. After entering a trade, the mentor tells the kid:
okay, go out and play. Explore the playground. Ride your bike. Just go have
fun and forget about this trade. Eat five scoops of ice cream. Play catch or
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tag. Linger in the yard as the sun sets. We’ll come back in a couple weeks
and see what happened. If the trade was profitable, so be it. If the trade
failed, then we’ll move on to the next compelling chart pattern. This would
be an excellent trading routine.
Yes, we should devote serious effort to studying classical charting but we
must also live our life. The truth is that the best books on classical charting
are not difficult. The principles and suggestions are logical and
straightforward. The great difficulty is remembering and following the rules
because our emotions will constantly push us to bad trading practices. We
will find it necessary to constantly review and remind ourselves of good
trading practices because we tend to forget so easily and we are so very
stubborn. We are our own worst enemy.
So I am suggesting that we be open to the possibility that we may not be
successful over the long run as a chart trader. I believe this
acknowledgement increases my chances of being a successful trader over the
long run. By trading with just a portion of my savings, pursuing other
opportunities and interests, and continuously acquiring diverse skills and
knowledge, I am not so emotionally caught up on the success of my
trading. And this detachment is crucial to trade well.
Some readers might ask if such acknowledgement of our limitations sets
us up for failure. There is a chance that we will not commit seriously to
studying the markets and trading well if we have other plans. Wouldn’t it
be better to say there is no turning back once we start trading? I don’t think
so. Optimism is good, but it must be balanced with planning and
prudence, especially in trading. All of us will fail at many things in life, and
some of us may not become successful traders. Failure in trading doesn’t
make us a bad person, nor should it mean losing our savings. But I believe a
“do-or-die” attitude in trading makes a large financial loss much more
likely. We should be mature enough to tackle a new challenge like trading
without confusing the necessary dedication and patience with a destructive
“my self-respect depends on making a fortune in trading” attitude. Mix
energy and dedication with intellectual modesty, maturity, and
perspective. Adopting this outlook is not preparing for failure but wisely
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Let me make one more appeal for intellectual modesty in all our endeavors.
Consider what Benjamin Graham, a great investor and Warren Buffett’s
teacher, said about his profession (picking individual stocks with the goal of
beating the broader market) in his book The Intelligent Investor:
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Michelangelo
So few succeed in the market because they want to get rich quickly.
Jesse Livermore
What Graham did say about technical analysis and charting in Security
Analysis, his foundational book on fundamental investing, is very
interesting and informative:
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BRIAN B. KIM
Wrap up
Experienced traders may skip Chapter 3 where I discuss the most basic
tools of trading.
I wrote Chapter 3 because I wanted everyone, including people who
have never looked at a stock chart, to feel comfortable learning about
trading stocks using chart patterns. While my goal was not to write an
encyclopedia on trading, my goal was to give the novice trader as inviting a
learning environment as possible.
My goal is not to make all of us classical chartists. My goal is to do my
best to help us decide whether we might consider trading stocks using
classical charting. If we decide after reading this book that trading is not for
us, then we should be proud of having made the effort to explore a new
idea.
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PART II
25
CHAPTER 5
Head & Shoulders Top
The first classical pattern we’ll look at is the Head & Shoulders top pattern.
A H&S top can form after a significant uptrend and indicates a possible
trend reversal that leads to a price decline.
The following weekly chart, where each price bar represents a week’s price
range, shows a massive textbook H&S top that formed in Boeing from May
2006 to June 2008 with a decisive breakdown that penetrated the neckline
in late June 2008:
FIGURE 1
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A valid H&S top pattern must have 3 peaks with the middle peak, the
head, rising above the shoulder peaks and the two shoulders must have
some overlap in price, and the more overlap the better. The pattern should
form after a significant rise in price. That is, a reversal pattern must have
something to reverse. A H&S top’s neckline connects the bottom of the left
shoulder to the bottom of the head. A H&S top is completed when prices
decisively close below the neckline after forming the right shoulder.
Beyond these essential features, there are many variations to the H&S
top. As we gain experience looking at charts, we will learn to focus our
attention on well-formed patterns and ignore the rest.
Every chart offers important lessons. Some of the takeaways from
Boeing’s H&S top are:
First, we, especially beginners, should strive to trade only chart patterns
that are as well formed as this H&S top. Of course just because a pattern is
textbook-perfect doesn’t mean the pattern will work and be profitable. In
fact, even “perfect”-looking patterns will fail most of the time. The point is
that we should not force meaning onto charts where there is none. We
must not project our hopes, dreams, and wishes onto charts. Classical chart
patterns that are potential candidates for trading should be clearly defined
and easy to spot. There was no doubt when looking at Figure 1 that Boeing
was forming a possible H&S top pattern.
Second, a weekly chart is a valuable way to see the big picture. Though I
make almost all entry and exit decisions based on a stock’s daily chart, I
always check the weekly chart to get a sense of the overall context in which
a pattern is forming.
This massive H&S top in Boeing was so big that a trader would have
likely missed this topping pattern if looking only at a daily chart. It would
have been a case of losing sight of the forest for the trees. And while such
big patterns are not very common, they are common enough to justify the
regular review of weekly charts.
Third, and this point will be stressed many times, we must be patient.
Many patterns take months and sometimes, like Boeing’s H&S top, years
to develop. While there are many shorter patterns ranging from days to
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several weeks discussed in this book, know that significant reversals of trend
take time to develop. Also note how prices entered a narrow trading range
for three months after breaking down through the neckline. Three months
is a long time to be staring at our screen everyday waiting for the big move
down. The smart trader would enter the trade, set a stop, and go do other
things. Of course Boeing’s stock could have moved up and triggered our
stop-loss order. If so, so be it. We incurred a small loss and would move on
to other set-ups.
Our next H&S top is a 5-week pattern that formed in Apple from
September to October of 2012. This H&S top was small in size but not in
effect as it started a 40% price decline in Apple shares:
FIGURE 2
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BRIAN B. KIM
Apple. Thus, we must never place a bet without regard to risk relying on a
rule that is “supposed to work.” There is no such thing. Price is the
ultimate rule.
Second, we should never ignore H&S patterns, including small ones.
H&S patterns are one of the most reliable classical patterns. They are also
one of the most versatile patterns because if a H&S top doesn’t work, a
“H&S top failure” is a distinct pattern that can offer compelling trading
opportunities. We’ll cover H&S failure patterns in Chapter 16.
Third, notice that prices broke down through the neckline of the H&S
top and the 1-year trendline at the same time. Such interesting coincidences
are common in classical charting. The fact that these two developments
coincided did not guarantee that the pattern would work. But, at least in
my mind, these twin developments increased the likelihood of a powerful
trend reversal.
Fourth, note the hard retest of the neckline. Retests are price reversals
after breakout that re-challenge the breakout boundary. Here, after
breaking down through the neckline of the H&S top, prices reversed and
closed slightly above the neckline before breaking down in a sustained
downtrend. Some retests lead to pattern failure while others stop at or short
of the breakout boundary. All retests challenge our poise. We cannot know
if or when retests will occur. We must be ready for them.
After we view some more charts to get a feel for classical chart patterns,
we will discuss in depth how we can enter trades and set stop-loss orders.
There is no rule that works ideally every time. For now, know that retests of
key pattern boundaries happen often and that the only thing we can control
is our entry and stop points.
Lastly, let’s discuss short sales of stocks. Shorting allows a trader to
profit from price declines in stocks. Since there are both bullish (pointing
to a possible increase in price) and bearish (pointing to a possible decline in
price) classical chart patterns, buying and shorting stocks allows us to use
the full range of classical charting tools.
That said, I understand some of us may be apprehensive about shorting
a stock, especially if we have never done so. I was unfamiliar with the
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As noted, there are many variations to each classical pattern. The following
H&S top in ICA, a Mexican construction company, shows one of my
favorite variations in a H&S top:
FIGURE 3
First, note the head of this 4-month H&S top was itself a smaller H&S
top pattern. I find this pattern-within-a-pattern very interesting just as a
visual phenomenon. It can also have great practical value as it can offer us
the opportunity to enter a trade earlier than otherwise. For example, here,
we might consider shorting shares upon the completion of the smaller H&S
top pattern, then perhaps shorting additional shares upon completion of
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the larger H&S top. Every situation will be different, and just because we
have a pattern-within-a-pattern does not mean we will have an early, or
any, entry opportunity. And we must remember that even the most
promising textbook patterns fail, and fail often.
Second, note the down-sloping neckline. Necklines and key boundaries
need not be perfectly horizontal. They can be up-sloping or down-sloping.
I prefer to trade patterns with boundaries that are as horizontal as possible
because they clearly indicate the major highs and lows that must be
overcome for a decisive breakout. We will talk more about the merits of
horizontal vs. slanting pattern boundaries in later chapters.
Third, despite there being many legitimate and compelling variations to
the textbook H&S pattern, we should try, especially as beginners, to stick as
much as possible to trading patterns that resemble the textbook form. Too
often traders label a chart as a H&S top even though none of the basic
requirements of the pattern are met. Traders who appear in the media are
not immune from making this error. I think it is beneficial to follow the
principles spelled out by Schabacker and Edwards & Magee, especially
regarding pattern shape. I do not follow everything that the founders of
classical charting say in their books, but I do follow their physical
requirements for the classical patterns.
The next H&S top is a chance to apply what we learned from Apple’s H&S
top. We see LifeLock breaking down from a H&S top, and this breakdown
coincided with the breaking of a yearlong uptrend line:
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FIGURE 4
The next chart zooms in on the H&S top and breakout area:
FIGURE 4.1
Let’s talk about how much we might risk on a trade. It seems most
professional traders risk no more than 1% of their trading account on a
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single trade. I think most traders and especially beginners should not risk
more than 0.4% to 0.8% of their account on a trade. While our risk
tolerance and trading capital will vary, we must pursue risk management
and the limitation of losses as our most important goals. For example, if our
trading account is $50,000, we should risk no more than $200 (0.4% of
$50,000) to $400 (0.8% of $50,000) on any individual trade. These are
general guidelines and I think the more cautious we are, the better.
Let’s use the next chart that shows a H&S top that formed in QQQ, the
ETF that tracks the Nasdaq 100 index, to see what these risk guidelines
mean in terms of the nuts and bolts of entering and exiting a trade.
Classical patterns form in the major stock indexes and the ETFs that
track them just as in individual stocks. I always watch closely the index
ETFs – SPY for S&P 500, QQQ for Nasdaq 100, DIA for Dow Jones
Industrial Average, and IWM for the Russell 2000 index – to get a sense of
the overall market. While I trade mostly individual stocks, I also know that
most stocks move with the overall market. So if the market indexes are
dropping sharply, then I will be more cautious about trading bullish set-
ups.
The following chart shows a H&S top that formed in QQQ, the ETF that
tracks the Nasdaq 100 index, from August to October 2012:
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FIGURE 5
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project that distance down from the breakout point. This measurement is
the minimum move that could happen.
But, again, as with all “rules” in classical charting, these profit-
projections are general guidelines. As I have repeated and will repeat many
more times, the only thing traders can control is risk management.
Patterns, even after decisive breakouts, fail often. When prices, after a
decisive breakdown from a textbook H&S top pattern, reverse and go
straight up, we must take our small loss according to our pre-determined
stop-loss level and get out of the trade. We must not stay in the trade and
refuse to take our now rapidly-growing losses because “the measurement
rule guarantees that prices will soon go in the right direction (down) again
and produce the projected profit.” Wrong. The only guarantee in the
financial markets is that risk, indeed catastrophic risk, is everywhere.
Traders work with this harsh reality, but traders can do so on their terms by
always diversifying their trades, always honoring their pre-determined stops,
and getting out with a small loss if the trade doesn’t work out.
We said that the general rule is that the projected move is the minimum
move that could happen. Look again at the small H&S top that produced a
massive 40% decline in the price of Apple shares. The takeaways from
Apple’s H&S top are that we should never ignore a H&S top pattern
whatever its size and that there is no correct answer as to when to take
profits. There was no way to know that this small H&S top would lead to a
40% decline. If we took profits after a 20% decline and happily looked
elsewhere for other trade set-ups, then we should not be angry or
embarrassed about the stock continuing to drop. Even here we must
remember that there will always be more opportunities.
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CHAPTER 6
Head & Shoulders Bottom
The head and shoulders bottom pattern is just that: a H&S top pattern
turned upside down.
FIGURE 6
The H&S bottom has three valleys with the middle valley, the head,
deepest. Note how this H&S bottom’s right shoulder took the form of an
ascending triangle. We will discuss ascending triangles in Chapter 9. So we
have another pattern-within-a-pattern and a decisive breakout from the
ascending triangle coincided with the breakout from the H&S bottom. As
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we will see here and in other charts, the more powerful the breakout, the
more difficult it can be, and sometimes too risky, to enter the trade.
The next chart focuses on the breakout from the right shoulder:
FIGURE 6.1
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FIGURE 6.2
Let’s say we choose to place a buy-stop order at 8.30, which is above the
horizontal boundary of the right-shoulder ascending triangle and just below
the slightly ascending neckline of the larger H&S bottom. If prices trigger
our buy-stop order at 8.30 and continue to go up to break out of the H&S
bottom, then we have the advantage of having entered earlier at a lower
price. Entering earlier means that we can buy a larger position and still
place our stop below the low of the breakout day. If we have a $50,000
account and faithfully follow the maximum 1% loss per trade rule, we have
$500 to risk on this trade. Entering the trade at 8.30 and placing our stop
at 7.80 means I can risk $0.50 per share. We divide $500 by $.50 and get
1000. We can buy 1000 shares, which is a 25% larger position than buying
at 8.71 and using a higher stop, for $8300 plus commissions and yet give
our position much more cushion to survive normal volatility and even hard
retests. We also have the potential to earn significantly more profits should
the trade work.
Important point: whenever I use a stop order to enter a trade, I always
use it as part of a One Triggers Another (OTA) order. For example, the
night before what may be the breakout day for Caesars Entertainment’s
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BRIAN B. KIM
H&S bottom, I enter a stop order to buy 1000 shares at 8.30 that, when
triggered, enters another order, a stop-loss order that will trigger if the
breakout fails and prices decline to my pre-determined stop level. Every
trade must have an exit order, a sell stop for a long position and a buy-to-
cover stop for a short trade.
As with any trading tool, buy-stop and short-sell-stop orders do not always
work well. Here are some of their drawbacks.
First, our buy-stop order could be triggered by a false breakout or an
out-of-line price move. These are price moves that spend only part of the
day outside the pattern boundary and then retreat back inside the boundary
by the end of the trading day. These retreats can also trigger our stops.
Again, there is nothing wrong with being stopped out for a small loss. As
we know, we must be ready to take many small losses. But losses can add
up, and more importantly, they can exhaust us mentally. And preserving
our mental capital is just as important as safeguarding our trading
account. Every trade is a calculated leap of faith. While we can keep risk at
manageable levels by always diversifying our trades and following other
prudent rules, we still need confidence to take swings at set-ups. If we lose
our nerve, then we cannot trade well. Repeatedly getting stopped out by
false breakouts will weaken our trading psyche. So when the real breakout
happens, we feel too spent financially and psychologically to make an
appropriate bet. We have lost our nerve. And the inability to take calculated
risks can be just as frustrating as a string of losses.
Thus, there are advantages to waiting towards the end of the trading day
to see if prices will close decisively above the pattern boundary and then
manually entering a trade. The closing price is the most important price
because it indicates where many traders felt comfortable holding their
positions over night. My experience has been that most trades, including
many of the best set-ups, gave me plenty of time to enter manually toward
the end of the breakout day. Looking at the charts above, we did not have
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to use stop orders to short the H&S top patterns in Apple, LifeLock, and
QQQ. We could have entered around the closing price towards the end of
the breakout day.
Of course, there will be set-ups when not using a stop order to buy or
short will mean missing the trade because it would be too late and too risky
to enter after prices have broken out and travelled far away from the
boundary. But that’s trading. We catch some, and we miss some. If we miss
a breakout from a pattern that we’ve been watching for weeks, months, or
even years, we have to remember that there will always be more and better
opportunities. So when, not if, we miss a trade, we must quickly move on.
The second potential drawback to entering a trade using a stop order is
our old enemy: gap ups and gap downs. Actually, we can think of gap ups
and downs as valuable friends because the ever-present possibility of price
gaps forces us to never risk too much on any trade. As we will see,
devastating price gaps of 40% and 50%, while rare, do occur. Such a huge
loss on a position that represents 8% or 10% of our trading account will
sting but overall is still a very manageable setback. But a 50% loss on a
position that represents our entire account is far, far worse and something
that we must avoid through prudent diversification and risk management.
Coming back to Caesars Entertainment, let’s say that the stock price
had opened at 9.50 on the breakout day after an overnight gap up and then
immediately reversed and dropped straight down back into the pattern and
triggered our stop. (In real life the stock opened at 7.85 and closed at 8.71
on the breakout day.) If we had a buy-stop order for 1000 shares at 8.30,
then we would find that this buy-stop order, which is a market order that
triggers at the current trade price, was filled once prices were at or above
8.30. Since the stock, after the overnight gap up, started to trade at 9.50,
our buy-stop order was filled at 9.50. We paid $1.20 more than we had
planned for each of our 1000 shares. And when our stop was triggered at
7.80, our losses were $1.70 per share compared to the $0.50 per share that
we had allotted for this trade.
The result is that we lost $1,700 on this trade. If we have a $50,000
account, a $1,700 loss represents a 3.4% loss of capital. Such a loss stings,
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BRIAN B. KIM
but it need not be anything more than that. Our trading account is still
essentially intact and we simply move on.
We cannot predict overnight price gaps, but we can still mitigate their
potential damage. One way is to only rarely use stop orders to buy or short.
Another way is to use a smaller position size when using a stop order to
potentially enter a trade. We can always add to our position if
circumstances permit.
If we feel that a potential breakout from an explosive pattern seems
“catchable” only through a stop order to buy or short but we prefer to enter
a trade manually, then we can simply not trade. It takes much wisdom,
patience, and strength to pass on a trade. It will be easier to pass on a trade
if we remember that there will always be more opportunities.
A couple of other takeaways from this H&S bottom in Caesars
Entertainment.
First, always look for patterns within larger patterns. The smaller pattern
can give us an early entry point and also help us identify and make sense of
the larger pattern.
Second, most patterns take time to develop. This H&S bottom took
five months to form.
Third, breakouts can move very fast. So fast, in fact, that we may miss it
or we may decide to not trade it. Our task is not to trade every breakout.
Our task is doing the right thing, and that can mean not trading a
breakout.
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FIGURE 7
The next chart focuses on the breakout from the right shoulder:
FIGURE 7.1
Let’s again assume that we have a $50,000 trading account and we don’t
want to risk more than 1% ($500) of our total capital on any single trade.
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BRIAN B. KIM
Entering at the high (5.20) of the breakout day and placing our stop just
below the low, say, at 4.84, means we risk $0.36 a share, which still allows
us to buy almost 1390 shares ($500 divided $0.36) for about $7,200. Such
an entry and exit gave us the possibility but never a guarantee to profit
significantly from a continued breakout from a promising pattern while
placing our stop reasonably far away from the upper boundary of the right-
shoulder rectangle to survive retests and significant volatility.
If the breakout in Callidus Software reversed and we were stopped out,
this losing trade cost us about $500 from our $7,220 position. That’s a
6.9% loss on our position but a 1% loss of our trading account. Most
traders, especially beginners, would be wise to keep our maximum possible
loss on any individual trade under 1% of our total account. As noted, it
seems most professional traders stay under the 1% figure. If I were starting
out again, I would try to keep my loss on any single trade to under 0.5% of
my account. We will lose the most money when we lack experience in the
markets. We need time to learn, and we might as well lose less money when
we are at our worst.
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earnings release. But we must stand aside because the utter unpredictability
of the market’s reaction to earnings means that we have no way to manage
risk. Here, again, it helps to remember that there will always be other
patterns to trade.
Here, the market reacted favorably to Callidus Software’s earnings
report. The stock jumped the day after earnings were released. It was not
until the next day prices went up again and broke through the upper
boundary of the rectangle right shoulder and decisively closed above it. The
timing of the earnings release and the market’s reaction to it were favorable.
The market’s reaction was not so positive as to cause an explosive breakout
that made entering the trade too risky. Prices increased strongly but still in
a controlled pace that gave traders plenty of time to buy shares at prices that
offered a favorable reward-to-risk possibility. Also, we could have more
confidence in the breakout because the uncertainty surrounding the
earnings release was out of the way. Note also that the volume on the
breakout day was heavier than in previous days. Such volume confirmation
makes it more likely, but never guarantees, that the breakout is significant.
There are no guarantees in trading except that we will lose a lot of
money if we do not respect risk. One factor that increased the risk on this
trade was that Callidus Software is a relatively low-volume stock. I consider
stocks whose daily volume is often under 100,000 shares to be thinly
traded. And I usually avoid stocks whose daily volume is often under
50,000 shares as they can be even more volatile. We can refer to a stock’s
Beta to get a sense of the stock’s volatility but I rely mostly on what I see on
the chart: CALD shares often had wide daily trading ranges. For example,
the stock jumped 7.6%, 8.8%, 5.5%, and 3.9% in the days around the
earnings report and breakout. Isn’t that good for the trader who owns this
stock? We must remember that what goes up quickly can come down even
faster. There was no guarantee that the breakout from this H&S bottom
would work even after prices closed decisively above the upper boundary of
the right-shoulder rectangle. The market could have changed its initial
positive reaction to the earnings report and pushed down prices anytime
after breakout. And relatively low-volume stocks can crash very quickly.
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BRIAN B. KIM
Given this risk in low-volume stocks like CALD, a fine idea is to trade a
smaller size here. We don’t have to risk our maximum on every trade.
Maybe we decide to risk only 0.5% or even less. Or perhaps we decide to
skip this trade. That is perfectly acceptable as well. We always have a
choice. Nobody forces us to trade. We need to evaluate every breakout with
one overriding question in mind: do we have a favorable entry spot that
limits risk?
As we’ve repeated many times already and as we will and must hear
many more times: our number one task as traders is to manage risk and not
to make money. Put another way: concentrate on doing the right thing
rather than making money. When we manage risk in a systematic way, we
will be able to trade for the long run.
The financial markets are always unpredictable, and quarterly earnings
reports add another layer of risk and volatility. We can avoid the market’s
unpredictable reaction to earnings reports by simply not trading through
earning releases. And risk and unpredictability are compounded in low-
volume stocks.
The next chart shows quarterly earnings reports producing very volatile
price moves in Hewlett-Packard shares:
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TRADING STOCKS USING CLASSICAL CHART PATTERNS
FIGURE 8
I know what many of us are thinking because I had the same thought:
those 12% and 17% one-day price jumps seem too good to pass up so I’ll
just hold my position through earnings releases and hope that the market
reacts positively to the earnings news. But these price increases could just as
easily have been comparable or worse price drops. Indeed, Hewlett-
Packard’s stock declined by more than 12% on the third earnings report
shown on the chart.
Recall our discussion about the distinction between informed trading
and outright gambling. Informed trading is about entering at a spot on the
chart that maximizes potential gains while defining and limiting risk. Yes,
we expect to have more losing trades than winning trades. Yes, price gaps,
up or down, unrelated to earnings news mean sometimes we lose more than
we had planned. Yes, all financial activities involve risk. But we must not
think that just because the financial markets are synonymous with
uncertainty that there aren’t degrees of risk. Trade entries and exits that are
likely to keep losses within our risk parameters are not the same thing as
taking a position before an earnings report on simply the hope of a positive
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BRIAN B. KIM
FIGURE 8.1
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TRADING STOCKS USING CLASSICAL CHART PATTERNS
around the closing price of the breakout day and set our stop somewhere
reasonably below the neckline.
If we had bought shares upon the breakout, we gained about 15% on
our position in the next two weeks. Then prices traded in a narrow range
for the next month and the quarterly earnings report was to be released
soon. What now? The correct thing to do is to sell our entire position and
book a 15% profit. But we are human, and we want more. If we are going
to gamble, then we should do so with only a very small position. In this
case, we would get lucky as the stock jumped 12% on the earnings report.
Yes, we can do the wrong and irresponsible thing and get lucky and make
money. But we will run out of luck and take a large hit to our trading
capital if we continue to take such gambles. Doing the right thing means
doing the unexciting thing over and over: honoring our stop, not chasing a
missed breakout, not gambling, and just waiting. Doing the right thing
doesn’t guarantee profits, but it is the best way to be a long-term player in
the trading game, and longevity is the best way to be profitable in the long
run.
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BRIAN B. KIM
FIGURE 9
Note that the right shoulder of the H&S bottom is much smaller than
the left shoulder. While symmetry between the left and right shoulders is
one of the defining traits of a textbook H&S pattern, as with all pattern
“rules,” there are exceptions. A H&S bottom such as this one where the
right shoulder is significantly smaller than the left can launch a powerful
move. It is as if the stock is itching to get moving and doesn’t have the
patience to form a right shoulder that is of similar size to the left shoulder.
Note also that this pattern gave us plenty of time to enter the trade. We
could have bought shares toward the close of the breakout day or anytime
during the next day. It was not necessary to use a buy-stop order to trade
this breakout.
So was it as easy as buying shares once prices closed above the neckline
of the H&S bottom? The major strike against this pattern was that the
stock was very thinly-traded. Less than 20,000 shares traded per day on
many days during pattern formation. As noted, I usually avoid stocks whose
average daily volume is less than 50,000 shares. And I would recommend
that beginners avoid entirely such low-volume stocks. As we gain
experience, we may decide to trade, very carefully, some patterns that form
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TRADING STOCKS USING CLASSICAL CHART PATTERNS
in thin stocks. If I were to trade this H&S bottom pattern, I would use a
position that was at most 30% to 40% of my normal position size.
Would I trade this set-up using a smaller position? Yes. The 6-month
H&S bottom looked very promising with a clearly defined left shoulder
and head. Another reason is that, despite the low volume, the stock traded
relatively “cleanly,” especially during the formation of the right shoulder.
Thinly-traded stocks can jump wildly around and make risk control very
difficult if not impossible. A stock’s chart looks clean to me when there are
few price gaps unrelated to pattern breakouts. As noted, breakouts on price
gaps support but does not guarantee the validity of the breakout. The charts
of some volatile stocks have price gaps almost every day. In contrast,
Lannett’s stock traded cleanly and in a tight range during the weeks leading
up to the breakout.
Of course explosive volatility can appear anytime, especially in thin
stocks, but the clean price action and low volatility during the formation of
the right shoulder would be an important factor in support of not
eliminating this pattern from my list of trade candidates. Yet it is perfectly
acceptable to pass on this pattern because of the stock’s low volume and the
risk that accompanies a thin stock. Again, I recommend beginners to trade
only stocks whose average daily volume is at least 200,000 shares.
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BRIAN B. KIM
FIGURE 10
FIGURE 10.1
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TRADING STOCKS USING CLASSICAL CHART PATTERNS
long. This entire set-up – from the year-long H&S bottom pattern (the
lengthier the build-up, the more powerful the breakout may be), the
symmetrical-triangle right shoulder that offered an opportunity to enter
early, and the textbook breakout on heavy volume – was very promising.
Indeed, I would seriously consider risking more than my standard
maximum risk and buy a larger position size. That said, I would still not
risk more than 1.5% of my account even on such a promising pattern
because there are no guarantees in trading. There are no rules that are
supposed to work. This enticing H&S bottom that seems so promising?
The market could care less as it can crash prices even after a decisive
breakout. The pattern boundaries we draw are just that: nothing more than
lines that we use as trading tools. The market and prices will do what they
do. They are never wrong.
Always be cautious
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BRIAN B. KIM
I have experienced this painful situation many times. After losing money
chasing breakouts and trading poorly formed patterns, I have simply lost
the nerve to make a meaningful bet on the next promising trade. Then I
watch from the sidelines as this pattern launches an explosive and very
profitable trend. I get more frustrated. I chase this breakout by entering at a
spot that carries more risk than my maximum-loss limit. I get stopped out
and lose more money. I have lost not only my nerve, but also my
detachment and my form. I am in a destructive cycle of negative feedback
loops. When traders are in this situation, and all of us will be in this
situation from time to time, we can exit our positions, walk away from the
screen, and take a break from the market. We must rebuild our mental
strength. We must regain our nerve, perspective, and balance. We must
take our time. The market will always be there when we are ready to trade
again.
Constantly reminding ourselves that there will always be more great set-
ups can help us not chase missed breakouts and also give us the confidence
to take a break. Even if we missed this Penn Virginia set-up, the existence
of this and many other exciting patterns should remind us that we will
always have the opportunity to make a comeback. The key is to be still
standing when favorable market conditions reappear. And effective risk
management keeps us in the arena.
Our next example shows yet another variation to the H&S bottom pattern.
This time, the right shoulder took the form of a small H&S bottom:
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TRADING STOCKS USING CLASSICAL CHART PATTERNS
FIGURE 11
FIGURE 11.1
Here, we again have a situation where the next earnings report was to be
released not so long after the breakout. If we bought shares around the
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BRIAN B. KIM
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