Current Open Long-term Swing Positions

Just a quick update on the positions I’m currently holding;

Before we go any further, if you weren’t already aware, I trade a mechanical strategy that tells me when to enter and when to exit. I trade this on a H4 chart [If you’ve read other parts of the website you’ll know I’ve more recently moved up to a D1 chart, but back to this example…] and typically hold trades for anywhere between a few days up to a couple of months.

Firstly, $DAX (Short) Entry: 12670.3 – So far, up approx. +400 points profit. I was very slightly late to enter on this and price initially went against me by approx. 75 points before price turned around. Thankfully I had quite a wide stop of approx. 145 points.

Dgjxmo_XcAAMc9w

The position was opened when my system gave me a short signal on Tuesday June 20th. I’m miles away from an exit signal so if this continues to play out I could well be holding the short for another week or two.As long as price continues to fall, I’ll continue to hold…

Line

Update: Trailing stop hit down at 12415.1, I trailed it behind each H4 high and was taken out of the trade on the 5th of July on the 08:00am H4 candle as we ramped upwards. Out for +255.2 points. No complaints.

Line

Secondly, $TSCO (Long) Entry: 247.05 – This is much more of a long-term play with a target of up at £3.00 p/s (Although, as usual, even if/when hit, I’ll still be holding for an exit signal). Again, I found this whilst running a scan and was late to enter, but it looked like a great opportunity so I took the trade. So far sitting around breakeven within a range.

TSCO-08.06.18-SC

Update: Out of the Tesco long at 259.54 for +1.12R, a +4.12% gain risking 4% on the trade. A high risk percentage, but in such a strong trend and on a H4 timeframe I felt the risk was justified.

Why did I close this trade? I closed this trade manually pre-exit signal as I’m moving up from a H4 to a D1 timeframe because I recently opened a new account to day-trade a couple of my edges and I realised I’d struggle to manage the swing portfolio whilst also concentrating on other shorter timeframe positions.

Line

Thirdly, $BATS (Short) Entry: 3793.7 – I found this whilst running a scan when looking to add a short stock position to diversify the portfolio (I was looking to take a short position on a US stock to balance long-short) and although I was very slightly late to enter and my short entry signal had been offered a few H4 bars back, it looked like a very solid play.

BACS-08.06.18-SC

As I was hoping, price has instantly gone my way so far (These are usually the best trades) and within 48 hours I’m up just above +200 points profit and it’s taken my open P&L up above +5.4R. You know it by now; As long as price continues to fall, I’ll continue to hold…

Line

Update: Unfortunately, my trailing stop was hit and I was taken out of the $BATS trade at break-even on June 20th at the beginning of the session. After the initial fall, price began to retrace and I wasn’t offered a chance to trail the stop without compromising running the position. Next trade…

Line

As I said originally, I’m always mindful that any position I open is just one trade in hundreds of trades that I’ll take, and they could well all be small, manageable losses. If they are, I’ll continue to follow my plan and move on to the next opportunity knowing that across a large enough sample size of trades, my edge will play out and my strategy is profitable.

In this case, these three trades have all given fairly positive outcomes. Not brilliant by any means, but a break-even trade, a +1.12R and a +2.4R aren’t to be sniffed at.

My next post in this section will be an entry from my trade journal analysing my overall performance across a quarter. Look out for that soon.

If you have any questions, feel free to Email me.

Line

Leave a Reply