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.
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
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Biotech company StemCells hits new high after FDA approval. |
| • |
Refiners Holly Corp and Tesoro near three-month highs. |
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U.K. enters recession... iShares United Kingdom ETF hits all-time low. |
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Credit-card giants American Express, Visa, and Capital One hit new lows on increasing consumer delinquencies and charge-offs. |
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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 |
|
| Company |
Sym |
Industry |
Geron Corp |
GERN |
biopharma |
AeroVironment |
AVAV |
aerospace |
StemCells |
STEM |
biotech |
Village Super Market |
VLGEA |
grocery stores |
|
| Company |
Sym |
Industry |
Saks |
SKS |
luxury retail |
Blackstone |
BX |
asset mgmt |
Scholastic |
SCHL |
publishing |
CME Group |
CME |
futures exchange |
American Express |
AXP |
credit cards |
Newell Rubbermaid |
NWL |
consumer prod |
Dow Chemical |
DOW |
chemicals |
Atlas Pipeline |
AHD |
oil & gas pipeline |
Luxottica |
LUX |
eyeglasses |
Fifth Third Bancorp |
FITB |
bank |
MV Russia |
RSX |
ETF |
Capital One |
COF |
credit cards |
MBIA |
MBI |
bond insurer |
Barclays |
BCS |
bank |
Elizabeth Arden |
RDEN |
cosmetics |
iShares Italy |
EWI |
ETF |
China Unicom |
CHU |
telecom |
Harley-Davidson |
HOG |
motorcycles |
Marsh & McLennan |
MMC |
insurance |
Deutsche Bank |
DB |
bank |
iShares U.K. |
EWU |
ETF |
BT Group |
BT |
telecom |
U.S. Natural Gas |
UNG |
natural gas |
Steinway Musical |
LVB |
instruments |
Intuitive Surgical |
ISRG |
medical equip |
Clorox |
CLX |
chemicals |
Seagate |
STX |
disc drives |
Nokia |
NOK |
cell phones |
Visa |
V |
credit cards |
Royal Bank Canada |
RY |
bank |
Hitachi |
HIT |
electronics |
Thor Industries |
THO |
RVs |
|
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