Trading in an Uncertain Market

Volatility is a trader's bread and butter: Without it, profits are harder to come by. However, when volatility remains elevated for an extended period, it could be the sign of a more deeply rooted market shift.

For many traders, that may mean adopting a more defensive approach. Here are three tips for trading in an uncertain market.

1. Be more selective

Amid uncertainty, many traders tend to close out speculative positions in favor of more conservative trade candidates. That means replacing heavily promoted cash-burning upstarts that lack the ability to weather a tough market with more stable companies that have strong cash flows and competitive positions. That way, traders can ride out a potential bear market knowing the companies in their portfolio will most likely still be around.

Those looking to do this can use Schwab's screening tool to search for companies by the following characteristics:

  • Volume: Stocks with higher trading volumes tend to be less volatile than lower-volume stocks because it takes much more trading activity to move their prices.
  • Price per share: Shares priced in the double digits or higher tend to be less volatile than cheaper stocks because, as with volume, it takes proportionally more movement to affect them. Stocks with solid share prices also are less likely to be delisted for failing to meet their exchanges' minimum price requirements.
  • CFRA rating: CFRA, one of the world's largest independent investment research firms, rates publicly traded stocks based on certain fundamental factors. Stocks with a three-star rating are expected to perform in line with their benchmarks over the next 12 months, while those rated four or five stars are expected to beat their benchmarks.
  • Schwab Equity Rating: Schwab's scoring system—which analyzes stocks based on growth, quality, sentiment, stability, and valuation criteria—awards an A rating to just 10% of the qualifying stocks. Our research shows that A-rated stocks strongly outperform the market, on average, because the grade consistently captures companies with low and potentially improving investor expectations, which generally coincides with superior relative stock price performance.