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How to Trade a 'Failed Bottom' Pattern
By Brian Heyliger, editor, Inside Strategist
January 26, 2009

Back in October, I met with one of America's top traders... Mark D. Cook. Mark's annual returns have ranged between 30% and 1,422% since the 1980s. His interview was featured in the book Stock Market Wizards. And he shared with me one of his favorite trades...

It's called the "failed bottom."

It's a mechanical trade, which means there's no fundamental interpretation... nothing dealing with balance sheets, book value, or price-to-earnings ratios. You just make the trade when the price action tells you to.

The price action of the failed bottom comes in two parts: A declining asset hits a bottom and rebounds. Then, instead of shooting higher in a straight line, the asset works its way back down to the previous low... If it doesn't break through the low, it's a failed bottom.

By heading lower after the initial rebound, the stock fakes out traders. So trading a failed bottom is all based on fading the market... That's what the failed bottom gives you, a reference point from which to place your bets against the crowd.

Mark trades this pattern on a five-minute chart. So his approach is much too time-sensitive for many of us. But the same concept applies on any time scale.

Back in July, my Inside Strategist readers traded a failed bottom pattern on homebuilder Hovnanian. Hovnanian was down to $4.50, the same level it bounced off in January 2008. We bought it and made 42% in a week. Take a look...

The beauty of the failed bottom trade is its extreme profitability. The odds of making money on a failed bottom are only about 50/50. But the risk-to-reward ratio is one to five.

Why One of America's Best Traders is Ready to Buy

How to Time the Stock Market

In other words, if you risk $100, you'll lose at least some of it half the time. But when you're right, you can expect to make as much as $500...

Good investing,

Brian

Companies Cut Dividends at Fastest Pace Since '56
U.S. companies are reducing dividends at the fastest rate in half a century, squeezing investors who depend on the payouts more than ever to boost returns.

Five companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index slashed $7.5 billion in outlays this month, more than all the cuts from 2003 to 2007, S&P said. Today, General Electric Co. backed the dividend it has paid since 1899 despite concern that four quarters of declining profits will sap available cash. Read on...

U.K. Officially Enters Recession
The U.K. has officially entered a recession, with the economy contracting a massive 1.5% in the fourth quarter after a 0.6% fall between July and September, the Office for National Statistics said Friday.

The worse-than-expected GDP data point to continued interest rate cuts from the Bank of England. On the year, gross domestic product contracted 1.8% compared with the third quarter's 0.3% annual growth. WSJ ($) Read on...


Biotech company StemCells hits new high after FDA approval.
Refiners Holly Corp and Tesoro near three-month highs.
U.K. enters recession... iShares United Kingdom ETF hits all-time low.
Credit-card giants American Express, Visa, and Capital One hit new lows on increasing consumer delinquencies and charge-offs.
Last Change 52-Wk
S&P 500

824.40

+2.38%

-39.03%

Oil (USO)

30.68

+2.20%

-56.75%

Gold (GLD)

88.29

+4.39%

-1.99%

Silver (SLV)

11.82

+4.32%

-27.48%

U.S. Dollar

85.97

-0.20%

+13.54%

Euro
1.29
+0.19%
-12.50%
VIX

48.42

-14.53%

+74.30%

HUI

304.22

+9.13%

-34.25%

10-Year Yield

2.66%

0.07

-0.72

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Weekend Edition: The Perfect Gold Trade
January 24, 2009

One of These Stocks Will Hit the 85% Buyout Jackpot
January 23, 2009

Why Would 9-Year-Olds Sing About Erectile Dysfunction?
January 22, 2009

Commodity Q&A: We Could See Another 80% from Here
January 21, 2009

Why You Should Sell into Any Rally
January 20, 2009

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