Chapter 8. Reversal Trading Strategies
Chapter 8. Reversal Trading Strategies
Chapter 8. Reversal Trading Strategies
We look for reversal opportunities on stocks that have just made extreme moves to the
upside or the downside. Our stop will always be at the high or low or day which means
our risk will be very low relative to our profit potential.
Instead of trying to predict the next big mover, we let the moves happen, find them on
our scanners, then short the tops or buy the bottoms.
In order to trade reversals you must be able to identify them in real-time, and understand
your risk vs reward!
What Goes up Must Come
Down
Only Trading Extremes
The key for success with Top and Bottom Reversals is that we must
trade extremes.
Time Frame: 9:30am – 4pm (Strategy works all day, but requires high volume on the stock in question)
Stock Type: Low – Medium Float Stock (under 50mil ideal, but up to 100mil not usually a problem)
Range Today: Should already be up or down at least 5%, but 10% is better.
Requirements: A min of 5 consecutive candles on the 5min chart, more is better. Volume Spiking.
Price Range: Price preferred between $20-100, but applicable for all prices.
Accuracy: 67% (based on my trades) (accuracy lower because timing reversals is hard)
Profit Loss Ratio: 2.5:1 (based on my trades) (Wins are bigger because when they work, they work!
Finding the Setup
Now that you know how to use scanners to find the stocks worth
trading, you need to find your setup.
The reversal setups I trade
1. Candle outside Bollinger Bands
2. First candle to make a new high after 5+ red candles
3. Over/Under a whole dollar or half dollar
4. Bounce off 200EMA on the Daily Chart
5. Bounce off support or resistance on the Daily Chart.
We wait for the stock to break below the whole dollar of $79. That shows continued
weakness. However, if it were truly weak, it wouldn’t be able to get back above the
whole dollar. As soon as we break above the whole dollar, we get long at $79.
Whole Dollars / Half
Dollars
This is the riskiest type of reversal strategy, but it can also be the
most profitable. What I essentially do is look for an entry when
a stock is trading around the ½ or whole dollar, and set my stop
on the other side. Preferably, I want to see a stock break through
the whole or half dollar, and then fail. I will take the reversal as
it fails and breaks back through the figure.
Sometimes I will take an entry on an approach to a whole dollar,
but that is risky because that is essentially just buying a weak
stock as it approaches a support level, without knowing if that
support level will be respected.
Reversal Exit Indicators
I tend to prefer immediate resolution of Reversal Trades. If I get in expecting a bounce, and we don’t
bounce, I’m immediately on my guard.
If you are a scalp trader, you will typically sell based on Level 2 or Time & Sales. If you are a trend
trader, you will sell when the first candles makes a new low, or goes red.
I will begin to sell if:
1) I see Heavy Resistance on the Level 2 in the form of a big seller, I bail out by selling on the bid.
2) I stop seeing buying, and I’m just seeing a lot of selling on the Time & Sales, I bail out by selling on
the bid.
3) If my first profit target has touched, I sell half by selling on the Ask , and adjust stop to breakeven for
remainder.
4) If 2nd or 3rd profit targets are hit, I continue to sell small pieces on the Ask.
5) If my entry is on the 5min chart, typically I will sell on the first red candle on the 5min chart, unless
I’m already up so much that I can afford to hold through the pullback.
6) Since I expect an immediate breakout, if we don’t get it, I’ll get out breakeven.
Trading Market/Sector
Reversals
It’s important to be mindful of the overall market when you are doing
reversal trades. If biotechs are tanking and the whole sector is weak,
we have to be careful about jumping into a bottom bounce too early.
This is the same with market strength of weakness.