cdsjmc - You have had some very good advice here. Marconi was a complete fluke, and had nothing to do with skill. If you think that feels good, then you're already dangerous! Just wait and see what it feels like when you get hit by a profit warning and you lose 50% (or more) at a stroke. How would you be feeling if you had bought Marconi at 245 on 04.07.01 and seen it open at 112 the next day. Or if you had bought it at 18 on 21.03.02 and seen it open at 10 the following day.
Penny stocks are great when they go your way big time, but they rarely do. When they go against you who will you sell to? The institutions won't be buying them, and the MM's who were happy to sell them to you on the way up won't be interested on the way down and the spread will widen like you wouldn't believe.
Remember that if you lose 50% of your money on a trade the next one needs to make 100% for you to break even. If you have a trade that loses you 90%, then you need a 10 bagger to break even.
The only difference between stock A that has fallen 90% and stock B that has fallen 95% is that stock B first of all fell 90%, and then it halved!
Money management is everything. You can make lousy picks and still come out ahead with good money management. But even if you pick winners 75% of the time, you will still be wiped out with poor money management.
There is plenty of good stuff here, but the apprenticeship is long and hard, and expensive. Read how others do it. Start very small, or you won't last. And as Skimbleshanks has stressed, make sure that this is money you can afford to lose - I mean really lose, because there is almost an inevitability to it!
Penny stocks are great when they go your way big time, but they rarely do. When they go against you who will you sell to? The institutions won't be buying them, and the MM's who were happy to sell them to you on the way up won't be interested on the way down and the spread will widen like you wouldn't believe.
Remember that if you lose 50% of your money on a trade the next one needs to make 100% for you to break even. If you have a trade that loses you 90%, then you need a 10 bagger to break even.
The only difference between stock A that has fallen 90% and stock B that has fallen 95% is that stock B first of all fell 90%, and then it halved!
Money management is everything. You can make lousy picks and still come out ahead with good money management. But even if you pick winners 75% of the time, you will still be wiped out with poor money management.
There is plenty of good stuff here, but the apprenticeship is long and hard, and expensive. Read how others do it. Start very small, or you won't last. And as Skimbleshanks has stressed, make sure that this is money you can afford to lose - I mean really lose, because there is almost an inevitability to it!