Day trading is when you open and close positions on the same trading day, with trade durations ranging from a few minutes to several hours. Day traders may buy and sell several times in a single day.
One of the benefits of day trading is that you can take advantage of intermittent price dips and spikes, and you won’t need to factor over-night financing costs into your profits.
Choosing trading instruments
As day trading involves making profits in very short time-frames, most day traders choose assets that have high liquidity, and high volatility.
Liquidity means that it is an asset that many people trade – if you were trading forex, the EUR/USD pair would be more liquid than the GBP/HUF pair as more people trade it. Very liquid assets have lower bid/offer spreads, which will increase your profits.
Volatility is the measure of the range in which an asset moves over a period – assets that are very volatile have a greater range of movement. As traders profit on the price movements of financial instruments, the greater the movement the greater the profit (or loss).
Entry strategies
So now that you’ve chosen a liquid and volatile asset to trade, when do you open your trade? Depending on whether you want to be a fundamental or technical trader, this can be a combination of a number of factors:
Fundamentals include economic, political and social events, and the impact they will have on an asset price. If you want to trade on Commonwealth Bank shares and you know that the CEO is going to be holding a press conference, this might be a good time to enter a trade. The expected announcements of the press conference would affect whether you trade long (buy in the hope that the share price will go up) or short (sell in the hope that the share price will go down).
Technical trading involves examining charts arguing that, as patterns repeat themselves; past patterns can indicate future price movements. Some simple technical tools to use include support and resistance, swing points, and indicators.
Support and resistance are the points at which an asset price will change directions – support being the lowest point it will reach before going up and resistance being the highest point it will reach before turning down. If you mark support and resistance lines on your charts, this can be a good indicator for when to enter a trade, and whether to go long or short.
Swing points are useful when looking at assets charted using candlesticks – either the first candle hits a low, the second hits a lower-low, and the third hits a higher low; or the first candle hits a high, the second hits a higher-high, and the third hits a lower high. This is an indication that the asset price will likely reverse.
Slightly more advanced is plotting the price of an asset against an indicator, or another statistical measure. One example of this is having one chart that measures momentum (the rate of change of an asset price) against the chart of the asset prices. If there is a divergence, when the asset price makes a new high or low and the momentum does not, this could be a warning of a change in trend direction.
Now you have entered your trade using fundamental or technical analysis – when to exit?
Most exit strategies fall into the following categories – loss limits, profit targets, and timed exits.
A loss limit is the amount you are willing to lose on a single trade, with the general rule being never to risk more than 2% of your capital. Stop loss orders enable you to set automatic closing levels on your trade, which takes the emotion out of trading, and also enables you to limit your losses even if you aren’t able to constantly monitor your open positions.
A good stop to use is a trailing stop – like stop losses, a trailing stop is when you set an automatic closing level on your trade. However, a trailing stop will automatically follow the market when it moves in your favour, meaning that you will protect your profits if the market changes directions again.
Profit targets can also be set automatically at the time you open the trade – you simply set the level at which you want your trade to exit if the market moves in your favour.
A timed exit is determining a time at which you want your trade to close – this could be timed with personal restrictions, economic or political news, or the end of different trading sessions.
It is essential for beginning traders to monitor and evaluate their trading performance. A good evaluation should cover your trading profit and loss, your trading performance (the way your trades behave, including the amount of profit made, the percentage of profits and losses, whether your trades were short or long, etc.), and your trading process (your trading preparation, your entry and exit rules, your risk management and your trading evaluation).
Once you have determined which aspects of your process will help your trading and which performance criteria you want to measure, you need to decide how to measure these elements. Tools could include performance monitoring packages available with your trading software; or spreadsheets recording the profit, loss, volume and volatility of your trades; or a journal recording your trading decisions.
As this article discusses day trading, it would be valuable for traders to evaluate their progress on a daily, weekly and monthly basis.
Conclusion
These considerations should help a beginning day trader. Remember to automate entries and exits wherever possible, as this will help you remain level headed and make informed decisions, and start with small investments as you test your trading system. Then keep good records to monitor how your trading system performs!
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ReplyDeleteDay trading can be a thrilling way to make money. It's more challenging than most beginners think. Some day trading tips that can help the new trader as well as the more advanced trader to achieve your goals faster. They focus your mind and allow you to reflect on what works and what you as a trader need to work on. Thanks a lot...
Day Trading Secrets