
@Bullionaire Well, short interest, I occasionally look at short interest but I tend to ignore it and rely on what the charts are telling me. That chart is the finger on the pulse of the idiots that drive the markets up, down or sideways. In short, attempting to explain how and why the herd moves the way it moves is more the realm of game theory. Remember to that a short squeeze doesn't happen until the pain becomes unbearable. Why traders hold onto losing positions is why 98% of traders blow their accounts up and disappear. I also ignore fundamentals (Tesla should be trading at around $0.30 per share). As you've seen yourself the herd runs from good news and piles in like Lemmings when the news is bad. All I care about is price, volume, Bollinger bands, RSI, MACD and how the tape is ticking. I've made a good lick over the past month trading VGGL. Looking at the fundamentals it should trade in the $0.05 to $0.20 range but it's been holding steady over three bucks over the last week or so (good earnings report on a company that bleeds cash- I scratch my head too). I heard one guy explain it this way- most traders panic and sell at the bottom to turn around and buy exuberantly at the top. Truer words were never spoken. Ignore the analysts, ignore the ratings, ignore the fundamentals. Watch but don't trade news until you see with your own eyes that the herd has taken note and acted as anticipated (most times news is anticipated and priced into the markets already). But, and it's a big but, if your chart tells you to watch but not trade, sit it out. There will be other trades and the old adage that he who fights and runs away lives to fight another day keeps the dollars in YOUR account. Let the trades come to you. I think this is what burns more people than stupidity, trading for trading's sake. If you don't see a set up you like- walk and don't look back. I watch the first 90 minutes of the trading day. If I trade I trade. But, many are the days that I watch, don't see any set ups I like and go find something else to do the rest of the day. I'm not wired to sit glued to a computer screen all day waiting for a set up to develop. Look at the stats and you'll see that most of the trading happens the first and last hour of the day. I'll admit I've missed a few "last hour" trades where I should have taken a position for the market open the next day but it doesn't cost me any lost sleep. I trade the way I enjoy trading. If I didn't I wouldn't be at this very long. Find what's right for you. Guru's can give you the tools but it's up to you to decide what you want to build and how you build it. Looks to me like you're doing really well. Learn to tune the noise out. Focus on price action, volume, your indicators and the tape. The A-hole market makes can play games with the bid and ask but they can't doctor the tape.

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