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

5 Must-See Charts for Any Trader

Things are certainly looking more bullish, but has the easy money already been made?

Humana Pushing Pre-Recession Levels

The health-care stock broke out of a consolidation phase and is attempting a run at its 2008 highs.

Why You Shouldn’t Trust This Rally Yet

Until we see good follow-through in key sectors and stocks, it pays to play good defense.

Dollar Tree Could Make Traders a Quick Buck

Despite broader market headwinds, a fast trade in Dollar Tree (NASDAQ: DLTR) should be profitable.

Has the Market Put in a Bottom?

Some positive signs are surfacing, but an important piece of the puzzle is still missing.

Short Buffalo Wild Wings as Stock Cools Off

Although a potential long-term growth candidate, Buffalo Wild Wings (NASDAQ: BWLD) is likely to fall in the short term.

Why You Shouldn’t Go Bottom-Fishing Today

We may be getting closer to a trading bottom, but on an options expiration day, it may be better to stay on the sidelines.

American Express Approaching Breakout Level

American Express (NYSE: AXP) has behaved well technically, and its fundamentals are improving.

Final Flush Needed Before Market Is Out of the Toilet

Wednesday’s action was certainly weak, but a real downside volume spike is needed for a capitulation bottom.

Yahoo’s China Troubles Create Opportunity for Bullish Traders

Yahoo’s (NASDAQ: YHOO) four-week sell-off following the Alipay news has taken the stock down to support where it can be bought.