Filters (0 applied)

This trade made me stop trading completely as I was so upset with myself. I saw this ticker on TWITTER and thought it could spike huge, it was halted dozens of times throughout the day because of who knows what. I had NO research done on this stock whatsoever and tried to chase the hype. Biggest mistake I've ever made, and I will NEVER make this mistake again

I am very upset with myself on this trade. I got out about over a dollar/share too early on the morning spike, and then tried to buy the afternoon dip and held into a failed morning spike the next day and lost. Then I again tried to buy the morning dip which turned into a collapse. So stupid of me. I should have just held a little bit longer the first day, taken my profits of a couple hundred, and left. This trade made me step away from trading for a while. I need to learn to discipline myself.

I did chase a little bit on the way up from a dip off its highs. There was plenty of support for HOURS as I held this from around 10-12:30. There were better options, but something told me it could have taken off, which it might in the upcoming days, but it just didn't and I didn't lose big as the support was so strong at low 5.40's. Lesson learned: don't buy at support buy at breakout

LESSON LEARNED HERE: 1) couldn't execute orders in the 9.10s because I didn't realize I had an order already, and I also got out too early. Regardless, I would have taken my profits in the 9.10s before going up to the 9.40s. 2) Try not to trade before class starts 3) Don't buy a stock 40 minutes before the market close, this stock dipped way more than i thought it would the previous afternoon into close. Would have banked heavy on a small account, so still not a bad trade.
Never attempt to copy or mirror the trades discussed on this website or in alerts. Attempting to do so may result in substantial financial losses. Alerts are not provided in real-time. For that reason, it is highly unlikely you will be able to buy the stocks at the same entry price, or sell the stocks at the same exit price, to achieve the same or similar profits obtained.