winston wrote:What did I do right and will continue to do ? [/b]
Always use a mechanical Trailing Stop Loss. A mental Trailing Stop-Loss may not be adequate, especially when the stock has gone up a lot in a very short time ( > 50% in 7 days )
bro w: you cant win them all....you still win in thsi instance, nonetheless...
just an an exercise...if this stock had options (assuming american style), then this is a possible position to take, which ensures locking in profits and still offers unlimited upside potential....
supposing your stock price was at $5
Buy a front month Put at $4.50 strike (so that should the price suddenly plummet, the PUT will profit from ~$4.50 downwards)
and
Sell a front month Call at $6 strike (to largely fund your $4.50 Put premium. given that stock has risen aggressively recently, this Call option implied volatility would have risen, hence, i suspect that the OTM $6 Call would be expensive...worthy of a sell) >> this means that only when the stock price rise close to $6 that you would begin to start losing money on your Short $6 Call position... but one can really just close off that Short Call position...
W : i hope this example, gives clarity to our earlier discussion on the difference between "short" a warrant and "writing" an option... although both are technically "sell", in the former, you do NOT receive money for this trade. for the latter, you actually receive money into your account.