Ripping Through Charts
Ripping Through Charts
Before training at SMB I used to rip through charts religiously. I called it the ‘poor man’s training
program’ This was several years ago, but I still rip through charts. I find it to be a very useful
source of trading ideas and for getting an overall feel of what the market is doing across multiple
sectors.
Ripping through charts is the act of looking at as many charts as you can in one sitting. There are a
variety of different approaches to ripping through charts, and I’ll cover some here, but the most
important approach is to just do it every day when you’re first starting out. It doesn’t need to be
complicated. I can even save you the next several paragraphs below with 4 simple points:
1. Rip through 100+ charts after the market close every day
2. Rip through the charts of stocks that fit your experience level or current trading style
3. Take note of charts with potential trading setups
4. Review the charts you took note of the prior day and try to figure out why they did what they
did
Why
Ripping through charts exposes a new trader to more market patterns. It can take an untrained
trader years to absorb enough market patterns to become consistently profitable. To gain an edge,
you can develop exercises to increase the amount of market patterns you take in every day; thus
reducing the learning curve. Exposing yourself to as many charting patterns as possible at the
beginning of your trading career is one of those exercises that will make a big impact on your
development. Dr. Steenbarger has written extensively on market patterns through Traderfeed.
Even if you are a semi-experienced trader trying to improve, ripping through charts and finding a
stock with a potentially good technical trading setup and using your trading skills and trading
methodology to trade the setup is a powerful learning experience; whether you make money on the
trade or not. Over time, and analysis, you will learn what charting setups are most likely to gel with
your trading style and trading plays.
Ripping through charts also exposes you to more trading opportunities. If you are the kind of trader
who is stuck in a rut, trading the same stocks every day and not improving, rip through some
charts. Find potential trading setups that work for you in stocks that work best for your trading
style. Practice trading those new stocks on a demo platform or live with small size.
Ripping through charts also gives you a great feel for the market over time. Through sheer
repetition you get a feel for how different sectors are moving and how the market as a whole is
trading and what trading plays may be more viable than others. Even if I do not trade one idea from
ripping through charts, the overall perspective I get of the market is worth the daily effort.
How
Rip through at least a 100 charts every day. It doesn’t matter how you get a hold of the charts, just
do it. For the sake of brevity, here are just a few ideas:
Find the stocks that are the day’s biggest winners and losers
Look at the charts for the stocks that are in your basket
Look at the charts for all of the stocks shared by other traders
Look through the top 10 most influential stocks in every major sector
Look at the charts of different markets, futures, or market ETFs
Use a stock filter or screener to identify only stocks that trade best with your experience
level or trading methodology. For new traders, you may want to set a daily volume
minimum and look for stocks that fall between particular prices; such as stocks that trade
above $10 and below $70
Find filters that let you identify potential trading plays that work best for you. If you make a
lot of consolidation breakout trades, then find a filter that will help you identify stocks that
are consolidating or near important resistance levels and rip through their charts looking for
potential breakouts
Use a filter and look for stocks that have traded with higher volume than normal
If it is earning season rip through all of the stocks that are going to report or have reported
for second day plays
Rip through the charts of stocks you took note of the day before when ripping through
charts.
I usually rip through charts after the market close every day. This seems to be the most reasonable
and flexible time for the average full time trader in the US time zone. You want to write notes when
ripping through charts. I do not write down every stock I look at, just the charts and details that
appeal to me. You’ll probably find yourself writing a lot of ideas down when first ripping through
charts before you get the feel of it.
Write down the symbols of stocks with good potential trading setups for the next day. Write down
the important price levels or the types of trading plays you expect to occur. Take note of peculiar
technical patterns and other indicators that you find interesting. Do you see a lot of stocks in the
same sector with similar trading setups? Maybe you should write that down. What if one of those
sector stocks is not trading with the rest of the sector? That’s interesting. Maybe you should write
that down.
A vital part of the process of ripping through charts is the review. You should look back over the
charts of some of the stocks you wrote down the prior day and ask yourself: “why did they do what
they did?” If you jotted down the trading play you thought would occur and it didn’t do that, then try
to figure out why. Don’t spend too much time on reviewing though, or else it will drain you
mentally. Figure out a way to rip through charts that fits with your schedule; including the review
work. I usually recommend waiting for an inactive trading period, such as the midday or after the
market close.
As an experienced trader who utilizes some of the ideas gathered by ripping through charts, I will
keep track of trading ideas by setting alerts and creating a separate basket of stocks just for those
ideas. I only set alerts for the best ideas or in stocks that correlate in some way with the stocks I’m
trading that day for indicators. Too many alerts going off will be distracting.
Best of luck with adding this exercise to what you’re already doing.
rOy