Stock Du Jour, Wed. Apr. 15, 2020, APDN

Added on by C. Maoxian.

Applied DNA Sciences Inc (APDN) was the stock du jour … it did 76,800 trades and $119MM in dollar volume. There was also a latecomer HTB (hard-to-borrow), UAVS, which was a sub-dollar so off my radar, and the bookie broker didn’t have shares of it available anyway, but it did 124,000 trades — I didn’t trade it.

I paid 5.94 cents per share for APDN and have included my trade at the end of the recording.

Ozark S03 E10 Curse Count

Added on by C. Maoxian.

I tried to watch Ozark season one years ago and didn’t like it. Twitterers said season three was amazing, especially the last episode, so I just watched it and wasn’t thrilled … lots of portentous piano and violin music, capped off with an act of violence that made me flinch (wearing headphones didn’t help).

I thought I’d do a curse count for the episode, so here it is:

“fucking, fucking, fucked, fucking, fucked, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucked, shit, bullshit, fuck, fuck you, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fuck, fucking bitch, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fucking, fuck, fuck, fucking, bat-shit, fucked, fucking“

Filling in the Holes

Added on by C. Maoxian.

Linda Raschke teaches class, listen to her every word closely.

“The concept of filling in the holes, or the areas where there was a little bit too fast of a mark-up or a mark-down, the market needs to come back to test those, and say ‘are you sure? really? really? are you sure? ok, all right, we’re sure, we really do want to move off in that direction.’”

Impulse moves … single print areas … one-way trading … I call it ‘opening a window’ too.

In this webinar, Linda Raschke, President of LBR Asset Management and LBRGroup, Inc., CTA, demonstrates how to combine CQG's volume profile tools with tradit...

Stock Du Jour, Tue. Apr. 14, 2020, SONN

Added on by C. Maoxian.

I’ve picked Chanticleer Holdings (SONN) as the HTB (hard-to-borrow) du jour; it did 108,000 trades on the day. AIKI was also in-play and did 149,000 trades, but it is on the Regulation SHO Threshold List and my bookie broker had no shares available to borrow. Somewhat predictably, AIKI dropped a midday offering, during a trading halt no less, though without a borrow I could not get involved beforehand.

NURO was a latecomer nanocap HTB and did 94,500 trades. WORX and ICD were both “Day Two” plays and I did short ICD. The borrow cost for ICD was 4.97 cents, for SONN was 5.93 cents, and NURO was all over the place so I paid between 3.57 cents and 9.7 cents a share.

Watch the video in slower motion using YouTube’s speed controls. Pause it, rewind it, watch at slow speed then at normal speed, etc. for all key points on the chart. The CQC column on the far right shows the cumulative quote count for the chart range (also useful to study). I’ve included my winning executions at the end of the video as always. Go full screen, 1080p. Enjoy!

Stock Du Jour, Mon. Apr. 13, 2020, WORX

Added on by C. Maoxian.

SCWorx Corp. (WORX) was the stock du jour, doing 361,000 trades … ICD came in second with 108,000 trades … CANF was on my radar early on and I did trade it, but it only did 39,000 trades by end of day. All three of these microcaps were hard-to borrow and I paid 7.97 cents for WORX ($797 per 10,000) and 6.5 cents for CANF ($650 per 10,000). You need to have a lot of confidence in your ability when you pay these kinds of fees upfront. (ICD was $537 per 10,000.)

WORX was a runaway, there was a good spot to get long after 10 AM, but of course I missed it and was stalking it short all day — have to “make back” those borrow fees after all! There was a very tricky spot at 14:45, it looked like it was going to break, but zing, straight back up. Slow the tape down, pause it, rewind it, study it at that point. (It’s also the thumbnail image for the video). Anyone who was shorting the usual “holes” got run over. I fortunately was unharmed, but this thing was a widow-maker for sure.

I was finally able to short WORX near the close and also once after hours … my executions are included at the end of the recording. Make sure to watch in 1080p, full screen, so that it’s clear.

Movies Watched -- Night Moves (1975)

Added on by C. Maoxian.

99 minute running time … dumb story, convoluted, badly paced, uninteresting mid-life crisis adultery as side story … bad mid-70s vibe … only positives were a number of bra-less women and Melanie Griffith at age 16 or 17 (nude scenes shot when she was 18). Wouldn’t recommend it though John Farr liked it, and wrote “Vastly underrated, it merits re-discovery.“ No, it’s underrated for a reason — it’s amazing how awful most movies were in the 1970s.

Oh, l just think good, clean thoughts, like Thanksgiving ... George Washington's teeth.

Oh, l just think good, clean thoughts, like Thanksgiving ... George Washington's teeth.

Little Man Lost in the Wood

Added on by C. Maoxian.

Jimmy Scott’s version of this old Gershwin(s) song is probably my favorite. The great Jimmy Scott… R.I.P.

Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

One-of-a-Kind Zippo Armor Flame

Added on by C. Maoxian.

This Zippo Armor Flame from March 2004 (C04) recently sold on eBay for $431.69. The eBay post said that it was from a Zippo employee, so I assume it’s a one-of-a-kind or from a very small production batch. I do collect Zippo Armor lighters, but did not participate in the bidding for this one, though it is a beauty:

Zippo C04 Never Seen Before1.jpg

Movies Watched -- Cat People (1942)

Added on by C. Maoxian.

73 minute running time … perfect length … really enjoyed this one, good, intelligent writing … fun story, early “horror” but not really, it’s all very subtle. Farr called it “a masterpiece of creepy, psychosexual mood cinema.“ I wouldn’t go that far, but it is good, and does get a coveted green-go rating.

Don't nobody like chicken gumbo?

Don't nobody like chicken gumbo?

How Not To Trade Stocks

Added on by C. Maoxian.

Some will claim that the early guesses at a top were tiny “starters” which resulted in “paper cut” losses. Alternatively, no ”paper cuts” were taken and the later adds to the tiny “starters” were all “full size,” so it turned out that the trader had a great average and a fine trade, despite the early covers. Who knows? Maybe they’re not lying, but this looks like the approach of someone who “shoots from the hip.” Why risk busting out to a true runaway?

Click to enlarge