Stock Exchange: Energy And Schwab Worth A Look

 | Oct 21, 2016 01:32AM ET

Each week Felix and Oscar host a poker game. We listen in on current trading ideas in the few minutes before the game starts. They like to call this their “Stock Exchange.” I am the only human present, and the only one using fundamental analysis. Their methods are excellent, as you will learn if you join us for a few weeks. Since the time frames and risk profiles differ, so do the stock ideas.h3 Background on the Stock Exchange/h3

What is this about? Since launching this series I have had good questions on three general themes. Here are the questions and some brief answers.

  1. The model characters are fun, but please tell me more about what they do.

    I include the general personality of the model at the end of each article. I will begin featuring one approach each week with more detail, and soon provide a reference page for readers.

  2. Why don’t you show a track record on performance?

    I understand that those trying to sell a newsletter or chat room often provide some sort of time-stamped real-time record. You will find that most of these people are not subject to compliance rules. The “track records” tell you nothing, since they do not have enough trades to get into the “long run.” Confidence in a model comes from knowing how it is developed and tested. I would rather ask a few questions to a developer than see a few months of real-time picks. It is pretty easy to spot the amateurs.

    This is a brief answer, and I promise to follow up with a longer post. Meanwhile, here is our model developer, my partner Vince Castelli, in his Popular Science feature from 2002. It is one of the few projects he worked on that are now in the public record. He has applied his scientific knowledge to finance for decades.

  1. Why should I care about these model picks?

    You probably read many articles with stock ideas. Some are a single idea based upon technical analysis from a source you do not really know about. At the Stock Exchange you get four different recommendations from technical “experts” as well as some fundamental commentary as a rebuttal. I am not trying to sell anything. We are developing an institutional product. The results are good enough that I am willing to share and discuss with readers. Some of my clients are invested in these models, so I am not going to provide every trade in real time. It is supposed to be interesting and fun! Look at the ideas and do your own research.

h2 This Week’s Ideas—Focus on Holmes/h2

This week’s featured expert is Holmes. Vince designed Holmes to be a trader, but one that would be safe enough for average investors. It is not a crazy, day-trading program. Holmes looks for stocks that have sold off, formed a base, and have promising rebound potential. The criteria are strictly technical, so the stocks may not be appealing for long-term investors. Holmes is very cautious in making new picks and aggressively dumps losers. Like most traders, Holmes also includes profit-taking and trailing stops. The average holding period is a few weeks. There may be as many as sixteen positions at one time – all from our universe of 700 liquid stocks.

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Holmes reduces risk in three ways:

  1. Going completely to cash when market conditions are poor;
  2. Reducing the number of positions when indicated;
  3. Using stops and trailing stops on individual holdings.

I analyze the risk of each of our strategies. While it is partly subjective, I rate Holmes as lower risk than buy-and-hold for the overall market.

Here are the ideas for this week, beginning with Holmes.

h3 Holmes/h3

I am the rebounding specialist. I love great stocks that investors/traders have bailed on. My Bounce Play of the Week is NIKE (NYSE:NKE). This mega sports apparel and sneaker maker just keeps running a marathon while investors treat it like a sprinter. Coming off its highs of 67 in early 2016, this stock has been consolidating, digesting, and hanging out at the bottom of its channel. I see a good chance to power back up a few percent or more. I also love the risk/reward aspects of this trade. I would use 48 as hard stop, so I’m risking 3.8 to make 10 or more points. Like Nike says: “Just Do It.”