I didn't apply for any SpaceX shares and the broker I used was slow.
People were still buying when it finally opened so I grabbed 1k shares when it bounced after the dip, at 158. As things usually do, it went back up to that original high at 167, so about 5%. It carried on after so I scalped a bit. NB the red volume bars added confidence.
Coulda shoulda woulda made more if I'd held on.
Proper traders would have sold say half at the first real red candle (you look at the Orders coming in to see how big they are) then held the rest during green spells then sold in stages when it slowed down, etc. Then if it dumps you're still up.
Here's proof that you DO need that
reason to believe the price is going to go your way. That's your "edge".
Sandisk, (maker of Broad band memory , in huge demand) has been flying up for long periods.
So, it was going up. Normally I wouldn't enter, unless there was a pullback.
Lazily, I just bought during a rise, on "momentum".
You can see I bought at exactly the worst time, at the green line. I set a stop loss, at the orange line.
SOD is alive and well. It stopped rising EXACTLY where I bought, and dropped JUST enough to sell cheap, at my stop-loss.
It often feels like that happens 18 times out of 20. The thing to do is limit the amount of shares you buy, when trying that.
I am sure the Trading212 platform exacerbates the behaviour. It cheats, by always stretching beyond what's on the screen to give you a worse price.. I am moving. IKBR beckons.