|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
If you are at this page you
probably are already aware of, or are currently day trading.
Day Trading is not for everyone, the lure of “quick and
easy” money is truly a sirens song. Day Trading requires all
the attributes “regular” traders need, if not more
discipline and patience to wait for your specific entry
trigger.
Common Sense Capital can provide
the Day Trader with the right tools to accomplish their
task. Please see our on-line trading page for a list of
available platforms.
( link underlined) Day trading refers to the practice of buying and selling financial instruments within the same trading day such that all positions are usually (but not necessarily always) closed before the market close of the trading day. This is different from after-hours trading. The most commonly day-traded markets are the e-mini stock indices, the S&P, the Russell and the Nasdaq. However, day traders are also very active in most all markets including the currency, energy and even the grain markets. Day trading used to be the preserve of financial firms and professionals. However, day trading has become increasingly popular among casual speculative traders due to advances in technology, changes in legislation, and the popularity of the Internet.
Although collectively
called day trading, there are many sub-trading styles within
day trading. A day trader is actively searching for
potential trading setups, which in the judgment of the day
trader, is ready to move in price with a potential for a
profit. Depending on one's trading system strategy, the
number of trades the trader can make a day may vary from
none to dozens.
Some day trader’s focus on
very short-term trading within the trading day, in which a
trade may last seconds to a few minutes. Day traders may buy
and sell many times in a trading day.
Some day traders focus only
on price momentum, others on trend patterns, and still
others on an unlimited number of strategies they feel are
profitable.
Day traders
usually always exit positions before the market closes to avoid any
and all unmanageable risks - negative price gaps
(differences between the previous day's close and the next
day's open price) at the open - overnight price movements
against the position held. Some traders believe they should
let the profits run,
so they may stay with a position after the market closes.
Day traders receive a
margin break. Since margin interests are typically only
charged on overnight balances.
Because of the nature of
financial leverage and the rapid returns that are possible,
day trading can be either extremely profitable or extremely
unprofitable.
Day trading can be very
risky, especially if any of the following is present while
trading:
The following are several
basic strategies by which most day traders attempt to make
profits. Besides these, some day traders also use contrarian
(reverse) strategies to trade specifically against
irrational behavior from day traders using these approaches.
Trend following, a strategy used in all trading time-frames,
assumes that markets which have been rising steadily will
continue to rise, and vice versa with falling. The trend
follower buys an instrument which has been rising, or
short-sells a falling one, in the expectation that the trend
will continue.
Contrarian trading is a market timing strategy used in all trading
time-frames. It assumes that markets which have been rising
steadily will reverse and start to fall, and vice versa with
falling. The contrarian trader buys an instrument which has
been falling, or short-sells a rising one, in the
expectation that the trend will change.
Range trading is a trading
style in which stocks are watched that have either been
rising off a support price or falling off a resistance
price. That is, every time the market hits a high, it falls
back to the low, and vice versa. Such a market is said to be
"trading in a range", which is the opposite of trending. The
range trader therefore buys the stock at or near the low
price, and sells at the high. A related approach to range
trading is looking for moves outside of an established
range, called a breakout (price moves up) or a
breakdown (price moves down), and assume that once the range
has been broken prices will continue in that direction for
some time.
Scalping
Scalping refers to jumping in and out of the market very
quickly for maybe only a few tics of profit (or loss),
usually within minutes or even seconds.
Scalping highly liquid
instruments involves taking quick profits while minimizing
risk (loss exposure). It applies technical analysis concepts
such as over/under-bought, support and resistance zones as
well as trend line, trading channel to enter the market at
key points and take quick profits from small moves. The
basic idea of scalping is to exploit the inefficiency of the
market when volatility increases and the trading range
expands.
News playing is primarily
the realm of the day trader. The basic strategy is to buy a
market which has just announced good news, or sell on
bad news. Such events provide enormous volatility in a
market and therefore the greatest chance for quick profits
(or losses). Determining whether news is "good" or "bad"
must be determined by the price action of the market,
because the market reaction may not match the tone of the
news itself. The most common cause for this is when rumors
or estimates of the event (like those issued by market and
industry analysts) were already circulated before the
official release, and prices have already moved in
anticipation---the news is already priced in the stock.
Day trading is considered a
risky trading style, and regulations require brokerage firms
to ask whether the clients understand the risks of day
trading and whether they have prior trading experience
before entering the market. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Copyright © 2008 Common Sense Capital All Rights Reserved. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||