Tag Archives: stocks

Ways To Trade And Minimize Risk During Volatile Markets

Click to enlarge One of the qualities that can make investing in the stock market so exciting is how fast it moves and reacts. Prices are constantly changing, making it a challenge to keep up with what’s going on unless you’re sitting in front of a trading monitor. As a result, you might feel nervous about when to place trades, especially in uncertain market conditions. The good news is there are several easy steps you can take to better navigate your trading decisions during volatile markets. Here’s a look at some of the risks of volatile markets and a few ways to help you minimize losses. Risks Of Volatile Markets How much volatile markets may affect you can depend on the types of assets you hold, the total amount of money you have invested, and how you react to changes in the market. For instance, if you have highly concentrated positions, you are bound to face larger gains or losses due to having a high-risk portfolio. Some examples of risks that investors can be exposed to during volatile markets are listed below: Being over-concentrated in single-name stocks, specific sectors, or risky investment styles could lead to larger percentage declines in your portfolio versus major indices such as the S&P 500. Focusing too much on the short-term and holding excess cash could lead you to lose purchasing power due to inflation and under-utilize strategic trading approaches such as dollar cost averaging to methodically leg into investments on a regular basis. Emotions can be hard to control when you start to see red everywhere. Panic selling when a stock price temporarily declines on a sound investment could derail your long-term investment goals. On the other hand, if a company is failing and its stock price starts to decline rapidly, failing to lock in some of your profits or cut your losses could be quite costly. Getting too distracted by losses on your existing positions could also cause you to overlook favorable buying opportunities that could help you gain exposure to quality names trading at depressed levels before a rebound. Bring Your Asset Allocation Back In Line When the markets seem more unpredictable than ever, it’s a good idea to take a quick look at your portfolio’s asset allocation. Due to fluctuations in the markets, it’s possible your positions may have shifted out of line with your target ratios. For example, your stock-to-bond ratio may have shifted from a 60/40 split to a 50/50 split. Consider the benefits of rebalancing to help your long-term investment goals stay on track. It’s also worth checking if you are heavily overweight in any one area of the market. Concentration risk tends to rise in volatile markets. Reevaluate concentrated trading strategies such as those heavily weighted in single-name stocks or individual sectors. Dollar Cost Averaging DCA, or dollar cost averaging, in an investment method that involves investing a fixed amount of money in an asset on a consistent basis over time. It can be useful for investors who would otherwise choose not to invest at all or who are unsure about how to determine entry points into a stock or ETF. If you want to avoid having too much cash on hand, regularly investing a set amount of money into the markets on a monthly or biweekly basis can help you stay active, deploy cash, and avoid feeling like you’re missing out. Sell Stop Orders Do you want to protect your gains on a profitable position or limit your losses on a particular holding in today’s volatile markets? One common trading strategy many investors use is to place sell stop orders, otherwise known as stop loss orders. What a sell stop order does is it places an order to sell shares of a stock when its price reaches a “stop” price that you indicate in the order within a specified time frame. The stop price must also be lower than the current stock price to be valid. It helps to understand how a sell stop order works with this example: Travis owns 1,000 shares of Stock A. It’s currently trading at $100 per share. He has done well on his position and wants to lock in some profits if the stock price has a steep decline in the next couple months. Travis decides to place a sell stop order for 500 shares at a stop price of $90 for 60 days. If at any point during those 60 days Stock A drops in price to $90, Travis’ sell stop order will be triggered and a market order will be placed to liquidate his 500 shares. The actual execution price of the sell may not equal $90 exactly, but it should be pretty close depending on how quickly his broker is able to complete the trade. What if the stock price never drops to $90? The order would simply expire and Travis would be left with all 1,000 shares. The nice thing about a sell stop order is that you can set it and forget it during your designated time frame. No matter where you are or what you’re doing, you can rest assured that if your stock is on the decline and hits your stop price, your order to sell will be placed automatically. If you change your mind and no longer want to sell, you can simply cancel the trade if it hasn’t been filled before the order’s duration has expired. Buy Stop Orders A buy stop order has the same principles but in reverse. For example, if you are interested in buying shares of Stock A if it starts to show a rising trend in price, you can place a buy stop order. If the stock price reaches your stop price, your order to buy shares will be triggered at market. This can help you to make purchases before a stock price runs away and gets too high. Limit Orders Limit orders enable investors to purchase or sell a stock at a specific price (the limit price) or better. Let’s say Stock A is currently trading at $100. If you are willing to pay $99 or less to buy 1,000 shares of Stock A today, you could place a buy limit order with a limit price of $99. If your broker can meet or beat that limit price before the end of the trading day, your trade to purchase 1,000 shares will be triggered and executed. In other words, your execution price could be $99.00, $98.99, $98.95, etc. If the price stays above $99 the rest of the day, your order will expire. On the flip side, a sell limit order can only be executed at the actual limit price or higher. Stop Limit Orders Now that you are familiar with stop orders and limit orders, one step further is a stop limit order. In simple terms, a stop limit order is a combination of the two trade types and offers investors added precision. First, you designate a stop price, share quantity, and duration just like with a plain stop order. Next, you choose a limit price. The order will only be triggered if the stock price reaches the stop price and the order can be filled at the limit price or better.

Meat Industry Produces Some Juicy Offerings To Growth Investors

The meat products industry is one place where investors can find not only plenty of protein but some capital gains, too. IBD ranks  it No. 5 out of 197 industry groups, based on past six-month performance. It might be easy to dismiss the group’s recent strength as a defensive play in a choppy market, but some of the stocks in the group hitting new highs are demonstrating sharp increases in earnings based on fundamental factors in the industry. Hormel Foods ( HRL ) is one such stock.  It has been moving in a tight range since reporting earnings Feb. 16 that were 23% above a year earlier. That report represented a second straight quarter of earnings acceleration. The stock is in its fourth week of building a flat base, although it’s made a big move over the last several years. The company is benefiting from margin expansion driven by low prices of pork, which is its core business and its biggest business segment. It sells bacon, pepperoni and fresh pork into retail and food-service channels. Hormel also owns Skippy peanut butter, Spam lunch meats and Jennie-O turkey. The company broadened its offerings with the 2015 acquisition of Applegate Farms, the No. 1 brand in the natural foods organic space. It has a Composite Rating of 98, making it the No. 2 company in the nine-member industry group. The No. 1 company, with a 99 Composite Rating, is Cal-Maine Foods ( CALM ), the nation’s largest egg producer, which focuses on the southeastern part of the U.S. The Jackson, Miss.-based company sold more than 1 million dozen shell eggs last year, representing about a quarter of total domestic egg consumption. It has 33.7 million layers and 8.4 million pullets (young females) and breeders (males and females used to produce fertile eggs). Last fall, McDonald’s ( MCD ) announced that it was moving toward using more eggs from cage-free chickens. Then it began selling breakfast sandwiches all day. Cal-Maine doesn’t list McDonald’s among its top 10 customers. Walmart ( WMT ) is the biggest customer, representing 26% of sales. However, Cal-Maine is a major seller of eggs produced from cage-free chickens, and McDonald’s is likely to help egg prices stay buoyant. Cal-Maine’s stock appears to be starting on the right side of a late-stage base, although the stock still trades below its 50-day moving average. Tyson Foods ( TSN ) is another strong player in the group, with a 97 Composite Rating. Every week, it produces 35 million chickens, 128,000 head of beef and 401,000 head of pork for a total of 68 million pounds of meat. The company works with more than 11,000 family farms. Tyson has worked hard to separate itself from peers by adding value to its products through strong brands such as Jimmy Dean sausage and Hillshire Farm lunch meat. It’s working on other products, such as marinated and breaded poultry. Tyson gapped out of a flat base with a 54.52 buy point and has advanced more than 20%, giving investors a good spot to take profits. The catalyst for the breakout was an earnings report that beat estimates easily and was 49% above the year-earlier number.