Serge Berger

Serge Berger

Serge Berger is the Head Trader and Investment Strategist for The Steady Trader.

He has been an active trader since 1998. During his career, he has been a financial analyst, dealt in fixed income instruments at JPMorgan, and was a proprietary trader in equity options and futures. Having exposure to a range of different asset classes allowed him to identify which asset classes and strategies best fit his goal of achieving consistent profits.

Over the years, he created a trading methodology that divides markets into different time frames and characters, allowing him to determine which strategies to apply in which situations without emotion. By focusing on only the highest probability trading setups, Serge maximizes overall profitability and minimizes stress and volatility.

Follow him on Twitter via @SteadyTrader.

Recent Articles

Defense Stock Dropping Like a Dud

Oshkosh Corp. (NYSE:OSK) is down almost 30% since July, and likely headed lower.

Why Investors May Want to Expect the Unexpected Rally

Investors may just buy the market for a little lift on news of a debt downgrade.

Retail Stock About to Fall Out of Fashion

AnnTaylor Stores Corp. (NYSE:ANN) is looking to put its longer-term uptrend to a serious test.

How High Could a Rally Take Us?

Any potential relief rally over the next few weeks is likely to be contained.

Short XLI on a Relief Rally

Charts signaling further weakness in the Industrial Select Sector SPDR (NYSE:XLI).

Why You May Want to Wait to Go Long

The current uncertainty doesn’t bode well for loading up on bullish positions.

Regal Entertainment Stock Could Be a Hit

Regal Entertainment Group should see further upside over the next several months.

The Longer Stocks Wait, the Shorter the Rally

The lower stocks fall before a decision on the debt ceiling is made, the more short-lived the rally will be.

Two Ways to Take Aim at Target

After moving sideways for weeks, Target is likely to break out one way or the other.

Why Traders Shouldn’t Be Spooked by Sell-off

Despite yesterday’s sell-off, the path of least resistance for stocks is still up.