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Building a Stock Watch List

There are over 7,000 individual stocks listed on the various exchanges. Throw in ETFs and the number swells to well over 10,000 securities. That’s a lot to keep track of, let alone trade.

While every individual may have their own threshold or limit for the number of positions we can have at any time, I think most would agree we’d like to be exposed to an many potential ideas as possible. And then we can winnow down the list to suite our own personal style, focus and goals.

Michael Lamothe of ChartYourTrade has provide a drill down into his process of build a watch list and offers some insight that everyone can apply. Here is the complete article.

Maintaining the list weekly is essential. It started out as a habit (a good one) and part of our routine. From this weekly maintenance, we eventually noticed that by looking at the Universe as a whole, we were able to obtain deeper insights into the market’s health, rotation, leadership, etc… We began to use these measurements vs the action on the major indexes each week.

What we discovered was that when the elements in the Universe and the indexes were in sync, the market would be more likely to trend be it higher or lower. When they diverged, we would see sideways action until the divergence was resolved. This could last anywhere from weeks to months. The market doesn’t trade in a vacuum. There are multiple moving pieces to the market and a deeper dive into our own Universe provided key insights to understanding the whole.

Building the Universe

Probably 95% of stocks on the Universe list got there by passing our scans such as most active, 52 week highs tec. The other 5% are comprised of stocks we are interested in due to its story, technicals, leadership,etc… but fails our scans. The list generally runs anywhere between 150-200 stocks week to week. For a variety of reasons that will become clear in a moment if they aren’t already, it’s important to keep the stocks on our Universe List that do not pass our scans to a minimum.

We are much stricter about adding stocks to our Universe than we are when removing them. If a stock is strong enough to jump through all these hoops, we don’t want remove it prematurely even if it isn’t quite ready to be traded. We want it to be failing the “Ideal Growth Screen” by about 40-45% OR to be breaking down technically (such as breaking sharply below its 200 dma. Being looser when it comes to kicking stocks out of the Universe helps us catch some beaten but not broken leaders early.

Building your own Universe is easy and includes the following steps:

  1. Determine the parameters a stock must possess in order to be included in your Universe list.
  2. Create a list of stocks you’re interested in based on the above. If you can create your Universe based primarily on a predetermined set of scans, it will make the list far more valuable as a gauge of market health.
  3. Carry this list forward each week and add to/prune it weekly. Once you get the hang of it, it shouldn’t take more than 20-30min on a weekend. Consistency is imperative to having an accurate gauge of market health.

How the Universe helps us determine the overall health of the market

Our Universe List (and by extension our Ready Lists) serve far greater roles than simply being a list of stocks. By managing these lists consistently, we are able to identify underlying factors for market health, breadth, sector rotation, leading/lagging sectors, and overall performance. To do this yourself, a basic knowledge of Excel that includes working with pivot tables and creating charts is necessary..

As we compile data from our Universe, running these simple pivot tables and charts allows us to see movement inside our Universe. Monitoring these movements allowed us to find early expansion in the Energy sector in 2013, the Medical Sector in 2014 and 2015, and Social Media in 2014. It helped give us the nerve to stick with several leading stocks in the first half of 2015 and provided the insight that had us move to cash 3 weeks before the market crashed in August 2015.

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