The CrowBar Strategy

in watch •  7 years ago 

Before we begin, here are some important facts about stocks pretty much since Day One:

• In general, stocks go up over time

• Stocks don’t go up in a straight line

• Stocks aren’t very logical

• There are always too many damn stocks

• Penny stocks suck, so do utility, teen-themed apparel, restaurant, and grocery store stocks

• It sucks to watch stocks too closely, like every 5 minutes

And finally, and probably most important:

• The biggest, most salivating stock moves (the moves that truly make a difference in your life – like a doubling or tripling of the share price) most often come from stocks you only hear about when it’s too late

These stocks are seldom brought up on CNBC or pointed out in newsletters. Why? Because in both cases, they’re too busy blubbering on about what lower oil prices may mean to the economy, and whether it’s a safe time to buy some more Cisco.

So the question is:

How do you saddle up to the biggest stock moves in the land and catch some of the biggest moves of your trading career? (Especially using option leverage to carve out King-Sized home runs while tying up far less capital and risk than buying the stock).

How do you find them?

How do you get the confidence to buy them?

Is it easy?

Do you stand to lose your mind and your wits?

Can you still work the same amount of hours in your career? Or do you need to “put in the time” spending hundreds of hours becoming an expert in bio-science patents, or a pseudo expert in the new 3-D printing space?

Enter in the “CrowBar”!
So what is this… and why the weird name? The visual here is to imagine this:

Picture a 400-year old sunken treasure chest that’s finally been hauled up to the surface. Its latches are locked and all crusted over. But a trusty CrowBar is just the leverage tool to jam in there to bust it open . . . and feel the glow on your face as all that shiny treasure stares back at you!

I’ve done many, many CrowBars in my time. They’ve always existed, and always will. And once you study up on the CrowBar, you’ll have a whole new world opened up to you. I want to say one final thing before revealing this to you. And that is, the reason I’m even writing this down and making this available so cheap.

After all, if this is “soooo compelling” and such a big money maker, why share it or sell it? Why not just keep quiet about it?

I have 2 reasons for this:

  1. We live in the “80/20” world. What’s this? According to TrimTabs Research and Jupiter Research (as well as appearing several times on the TV program “60 Minutes”), fully 80% of the stock market volume today is done by institutional investors. That means approximately 20% of the market participants are YOU and ME. Fact is, it doesn’t matter a wink how many of you’s and me’s there are…we’re out-numbered by the big-money players.

  2. I’ve learned everything I know by getting to know others, asking them questions, being curious, and sharing what I’ve learned with others. Fact is, if you’re reading this, you’re in the 20% with me, and it’s time we stuck together (we’re just not each other’s competition anymore!).

The Essentials

So now that I’ve got your attention, let’s continue. At this point I strongly urge you to become “unavailable.” That is, don’t check your email, return a text or take a phone call for the next little while. I give you permission to “unplug” so you can devour everything I’m about to share with you.

Okay, good. I seem to have your full attention (ain’t it a miracle in this day and age?!). Let’s roll up our sleeves!

The magic of the CrowBar is to get you and me involved in a stock when a huge EDGE sets-up for us…

This edge is: hopping on board a stock when normal growth turns into warp-speed-like growth, then hopping off when normal growth returns.

When we started, I mentioned some facts about stocks. #2 on the list was, “Stocks don’t go up in a straight line.” What I mean is . . . the most compelling growth stories out there do a lot of their growing in bunches, not in boring straight, ascending lines.This is what’s known as. . .

“S-Curves”

Certain periods of growth can be downright explosive, and that’s what the term “S-Curve” is all about. This is a growth spurt that looks like the letter “S”
Screenshot_10.png
S-Curve growth usually happens to newer companies feverishly growing and executing.

As you can tell, this is rapid, warp-speed-like action. And frequently, it’s a never-to-be-repeated phase of a company’s history.

Ok. Now that I’ve explained the “edge” of what we’re trying to accomplish as traders here, it’s now time to unfurl the rules for an official CrowBar Set-Up.

Each rule is critical. In fact, you need to find all of the following, or you don’t have a true CrowBar Set-Up! Here are the hard-won nuggets from the real-world trading trenches:

CrowBar Set-Up Rules:

  1.  The stock MUST hit a new 52-week high
    
  2.  The stock MUST have doubled during the past year (For example, if the 52-week low is 50 we would want to see the stock at or                        above 100)
    
  3.  The stock MUST also be making a new, ALL-TIME high.
    
  4.  The stock must have an Earnings Per Share (EPS) ranking of 80 or above.
    
  5.  The stock MUST have a Relative Strength (RS) rating of 80 or above. (Both the EPS and RS rankings can be found on IBD’s website, under the “Stock Checkup” section)
    

These are the essentials!

However, you should take a look at these additional considerations and clarifications:

● You want to buy within 10% of the “double” high. For example, if the 52 week low is 50 we would want to buy when the stock is in the 100-110 range – not much more than $110. You don’t want to chase something, you’re buying into something red hot, we don’t want to buy white-hot!

● The Crow Bar set-up uncovers stocks that are drastically growing. We’re jumping on board with the anticipation (and expectation) this stock will cover A LOT OF GROUND over the next year.

With that said, we want to get long for approximately one year.
I LOVE doing this with a long-term call option, or a LEAP. These are normally January options. In choosing a strike price, I’m almost always going for an in-the-money option. This way, for each $1 move in the stock we’re getting a pretty decent move in the call options. I search for a strike price where the premium paid is comprised of approximately half in-the-money (or intrinsic) value and half time value.

So when do you sell the CrowBar? I sell if any one (or a combination) of the following happens:

If the Relative Strength rating drops below 75
If the stock drops suddenly below the 50 day moving average on big volume
If the value of the call option (LEAP) drops below 50% of what I paid for it
If any kind of fraud, government investigation or other weird event of news happens
Additional considerations to keep in mind are:

If you keep finding CrowBar set-ups, it means the market is healthy and robust (bullish). If you’re only able to find a few (or none at all), it means market conditions are shaky and dicey (bearish). You can still trade them, but waiting for a more opportune market may be necessary.
I never consider or look for CrowBars in the pink sheet or penny stock arena. No penny stocks allowed here!
I also don’t like stocks tied heavily into a commodity (i.e., oil, gold, crops, lumber, precious metals, other materials like paper, and specialty chemicals). Too many outside factors can quickly kill your edge with commodity related stocks. Things like elections, wars, weather, politics, etc.
Bill O’Neill (founder of IBD) stands by this rule: If a stock has a breakout, and it gains 20% or more within the first 2-3 weeks of the breakout, the stock is extraordinary and likely gains MORE ground. In this case, Bill says to hold the stock at least 8 weeks from the breakout. If you witness one of your CrowBars being extraordinary like this right out of the gate…this will only give you an extra dose of confidence for this position!
You could just buy stock (although this is too capital intensive, and far too much risk for my taste)
You could also trade bullish option spreads (for example a bull put credit spread, or money press)
How Do You Find Crow Bars?New high list. Try to find the daily list of stocks that are hitting new 52-week highs. This is pretty much the only thing you need! I subscribe to Investor’s Business Daily and these new 52-week highs are listed in both the print and digital editions (the eIBD).

The ultimate resource is to check each stock that’s making a new 52-week high that day. Plain and simple!

Now let’s take a look at a couple of real world CrowBar examples:

Crow Bar Example: JAZZ

Here’s a real-world successful CrowBar trade. It was done inside an IRA account to boot! Here you can see a screen capture showing you the security name (JAZZ), the date I entered the trade, and the purchase price of the call options:
Screenshot_11.pngAs you can see, on November 25th, 2013 it cost me $2,320 (plus commissions) to enter this trade. I bought one contract of the January 2015 $110 Calls at $23.20.

Now let’s look at a screen capture of the date and price where I exited this CrowBar trade:
Screenshot_12.png
From the above screen capture you can see that I closed the trade on March 5th, 2014. When I closed the trade, the same January 2015 $110 Call was worth $54… or $5,392 (after commissions).

I profited $3,072 on a $2,320 investment. A cool 132% return on investment. Here’s what this same CrowBar trade looks like on a stock chart:
Screenshot_13.png
Let’s look at another example:

Crow Bar Example: REGN

Here’s another CrowBar trade done in the same IRA account. Again, here’s a screen capture where you can see the security name, the April 9, 2013 entry date, and the purchase price of $35 for the January 2014 $175 Call options:
If you did a double-take… I don’t blame you! Because yes, you read it right – a single call option contract was sold for over $11,600 bucks! It cost me $3,500 to enter the trade… and when I exited they were worth $11,630.

A stunning 231.3% return on investment!

Here’s what this CrowBar trade looks like on a stock chart:
Screenshot_14.png
Crow Bar Example: QLYS

Now let’s look at another CrowBar trade done in a different account of mine. This next screen capture shows where I purchased the June 2015 $30 Calls on 11/7/2014. And you can see I paid $7.70 per contract for these call options:

Next, here’s what this CrowBar set-up looked like on a 1-year chart:

And here’s the “all-time” view of QLYS:

**Note on this example. . . There is no sell date yet as QLYS is a brand new CrowBar I recently got into!

CrowBar “Enhancer” Strategy – Selling Weekly Options For Opportune Income

Owning a long term call option (LEAP) is a lot like owning the stock itself. In fact, the technical term in the options world is a “synthetic long” position.

What this means is: having the “right to buy the stock” gives you some of the same privileges. One big plus is the ability to sell calls against your position – the same as if you owned the stock itself!

With a crowbar position, however, my main goal is intense capital appreciation from the stock going up and simply owning the long-term call (LEAP) options.

But it’s still fun to enhance profits by selling calls, especially weekly calls (if available) along the way!

Not all crowbar trades will have weekly options traded on them, but that’s ok. Even with the traditional monthly options, you can sell them, say, two weeks before they expire and still collect some additional premium (profits) along the way.

So when do I become an opportune call seller on a CrowBar position?

First of all, all future earnings dates need to be mapped out and known. This is oh, so very important! You don’t want to sell an option – unknowingly – over the earnings date!

Repeat After Me... “Know Thy Earnings Dates!”

The most important thing (besides the date of the next earnings announcement), is to take note how the stock has behaved during the last 2-3 earnings announcement periods.

Since we’re talking about a stock with pumped-up momentum, I specifically take a look at the stock’s behavior during the 1-month period of time leading up to its past two or three earnings announcement periods.

(Finding past earnings announcement dates is not hard. You can always google them!)

Perhaps the stock really gets excited and likes to rally during this 30-day period before earnings. If that’s been the trend, then let the stock price run (and hence the value of your LEAPs!).

If you notice more random behavior in the stock (during the 1-month period before the earnings announcement), perhaps you more aggressively sell call options for income during that time.

Always, always be careful when you sell a weekly call for income purposes! I always try to evaluate how much a stock typically moves (up and down) in a given week, then try to choose a strike price outside of this range to sell (for the week).

It’s not uncommon to see premiums of $1.00, 3-4 strike prices OUT OF THE MONEY . . . for a SINGLE WEEK OF TIME! (52 weeks X $1.00 equals a lot of money over a year’s time…chances are, way more than the cost of your CrowBar!)

Finally, it’s not uncommon for CrowBar type stocks to get mentioned in the news often while you own them. Here’s a little tip that helps me when surprise news hits the stock. I call it the 3-Day rule.

For example, if the stock suddenly gets an upgrade, it will probably bolt up higher on day one. Perhaps it trades up some more on day two, then succumbs to profit taking on day three. The point is, the stock is probably done reacting to the sudden news after 3 days.

For selling calls (collecting income) purposes, I like to sell out of the money call options AFTER a scenario like this – to rake in some additional income along the way (I’ll often sell one or two strike prices out of the money to give the stock even more cushion to run higher)

To repeat, you don’t ever have to sell any calls against your CrowBar! The above ideas help define when I do so. And finally . . .

Here are some other things I look for while I’m in a CrowBar trade. Every few days I’ll note things like:

How the underlying stock moves in its trend (when the stock pulls back, does it do so on lower volume? When it surges higher, is this higher than normal volume for these moves? And how does it track along with the overall market?)
If it’s been upgraded or downgraded by the analyst cartel
How it’s industry seems to be progressing along
I check in to see if there’s any upcoming industry conferences, analyst day events, or company presentations. (You can Google these and also check www.Briefing.com for these kinds of events)
Weigh any other kinds of weird market-wide events/news
What’s important to keep in mind is the uniqueness of a CrowBar situation. These are often triple-digit stocks that are hot and bothered and active. Big institutional money is either funneling money into them and/or watching them like a hawk.

Your intuition will also kick in after a while. You will OWN this intuition.

Why? Because that’s what happens when you OWN something instead of paper trade something!

You’ll get to see how your stock does on poor market days (if it’s attached or detached from the overall market). You’ll get to see the volume come in every day. If it’s traveling lower (in its uptrend), you can notice if volume is picking up there or decreasing, etc.

Conclusion

Happy CrowBar hunting! And remember, weekly options are an enhancer along the way. I don’t want this to blow your mind – but it really IS a mind blower!!!

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