How To Increase Your Trading Profits While Decreasing Risk

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If you’re a swing trader who has been exclusively trading only ETFs or only trading individual stocks, you have been missing out on a stellar opportunity to increase your trading profits AND decrease your risk. In this article, we explain the massive benefits of trading a combination of both ETFs and individual stocks.

Although the overall stock market fell approximately 1% yesterday (October 9), our open ETF positions surged higher and we had a very profitable day. Going into the day, we were already long both First Trust Natural Gas Index ($FCG) and a partial position of iShares Colombia Index ($GXG). FCG, an ETF whose portfolio of individual stocks often move in a similar direction to the price of natural gas futures, ignored the broad market weakness and rallied to a 1.2% gain. GXG, an international ETF with a relatively low correlation to the direction of the US stock market, edged just 0.2% lower. Additionally, both ETFs on our watchlist going into yesterday triggered for buy entry as well. Cruising 2.3% higher, the US Natural Gas Fund ($UNG) followed through on its bull flag pattern that we pointed out in this October 9 post. The other ETF that triggered for buy entry was ProShares Short QQQ ($PSQ), which inversely tracks the price of the Nasdaq 100 Index (recall this October 8 analysis of the bearish “head and shoulders” pattern that had formed on the index). As the Nasdaq 100 Index lost 1.6% and sliced below support of its 50-day moving average yesterday, PSQ conversely rallied 1.7% and broke out above resistance of its 50-day moving average. Putting the performance of all four ETF positions together, here was the individual scorecard for yesterday: +2.3%, +1.6%, +1.2%, and -0.2% (on a half-sized position). Obviously, that made for a pretty nice day considering the substantial losses in the broad market. In fact, it would have been a great day even if the main stock market indexes would have rallied yesterday.

The extreme ouperformance of our ETF positions in yesterday’s weak market was a great example of the power of swing trading both ETFs and individual stocks in our Wagner Daily newsletter. In strong, uptrending markets, such as what we had seen throughout August and the first half of September, individual stock positions will typically realize larger gains than our ETF positions due to the higher beta of small and mid-cap stocks that we commonly trade. However, when our market timing system shifts into “neutral” or “sell” mode, we immediately reduce both the number of trades and share size of individual stock positions, while increasing our focus on ETFs with a low correlation to the direction of the broad market (such as commodity, international, currency, and fixed income ETFs). Over the past 10 years that we have been writing The Wagner Daily newsletter, we have found the combination of trading both stocks and ETFs in our newsletter enables us to avert major losses (and even profit) when the overall stock market heads lower, while still being able to participate in generating steady gains in uptrending markets. The end result is a much smoother equity curve over the long-term (click here to see our performance page which demonstrates this).

As long as the market remains in correction mode, we are not interested in buying industry sector ETFs because most of them have a close correlation to the direction of the overall broad market. However, astute traders will be building a watchlist of ETFs that were exhibiting relative strength to the broad market before the pullback began, as these will likely be the first ETFs to surge back to their prior highs when the stock market stabilizes and finds substantial support. One such ETF to put on your watchlist is iShares Nasdaq Biotech Index ($IBB).

Presently trading just shy of its all-time high, IBB closed at near-term support of its 20-day exponential moving average yesterday. Since July of this year, that moving average has firmly acted as support, which led to a subsequent new high being formed each time the ETF headed back up. This means that IBB has not even touched substantial intermediate-term support of its 50-day moving average since its current uptrend began in mid-June of this year. In the coming weeks, we would like to see IBB retrace all the way down to its 50-day moving average because the first touch of the 50-day moving average after a multi-month uptrend typically presents a low-risk pullback buying opportunity with a very positive reward to risk ratio. The target for the pullback of IBB that we are monitoring is shown on the daily chart below:

$IBB pullback chart pattern

Although our current open ETF positions are now looking pretty good, we must be cognizant of the fact that the main stock market indexes are now sitting in a kind of “no man’s land.” On one hand, both the Nasdaq Composite and Nasdaq 100 indices have firmly fallen below key intermediate-term support of their 50–day moving averages. But on the other hand, the Dow Jones is still holding right at support of its 20-day exponential moving average and the S&P 500 only marginally closed below its 20-day exponential moving average. With such divergence in the broad market, we must be prepared for the fact that stocks could suddenly rip back up without notice. Therefore, our best plan of action right now is simply to focus on managing our existing open positions, rather than taking on additional risk exposure. This is simply in line with the current “neutral” mode of our market timing model, which went into effect at the close of trading on October 5.

The commentary above is an excerpt from the October 10 issue of The Wagner Daily, our swing trading stock and ETF newsletter. Subscribers to the this top-ranked ETF and stock picking service version receive our best ETF and stock swing trade setups with preset entry and exit prices, access to our proven trading strategy with market timing system, and access to our “turn key” technical stock screener software. Start your 30-day risk-free subscription for less than $2 per day (based on annual rate) by clicking here.

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