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What Is Day Trading?
We often hear the term 'day trading' today but just what is day trading? In very simple terms a day trader buys and sells with a very short investment horizon which is typically measured in minutes with trading positions being opened and closed within the same trading day. Day trading is particularly suited to high volume, volatile markets such as the forex but is certainly not limited to currency trading. It is for example very commonly seen in the equity markets, although it tends to be seen on the more volatile exchanges such as the NASDAQ, rather than the NYSE or AMEX. The principle is simply to spot an opportunity and then profit from it quickly getting in and out of the market with just enough time to make your profit and too little time to risk the market turning against you. For example, you might open a position at 11:00 am and close it out just a few minutes later at 11:07 am to take a small but quick profit and repeat this process as many as a hundred times in a single trading session. Today this traditional definition has been widened somewhat and we now also refer to the practice of trading from home through an online broker as day trading. And, just to complicate matters, the term 'swing trading' has also started to appear recently to refer to traders with a slightly longer investment horizon of anywhere from one to five days. Day trading in its truest form (buying and selling with a very short investment horizon) is a risky business and is not something which you should try unless you know exactly what you are doing as, while it can be very profitable, it can also produce very large losses very quickly. Although we talk about 'investment horizons' it also needs to be understood that day trading is not the same as investing and you will be working to very short timeframes during which you will need to be glued to your computer screen jumping onto the wave of a trade as it gains momentum and the jumping off as it crests in order to ride the next wave. Spotting the waves as they roll in and knowing just when to jump on and jump off requires both skill and practice. For those who enjoy the excitement of the roller coaster ride then day trading can be both exciting and profitable but it is not something for the novice forex trader and should only be contemplated once you have cut your teeth in the world of currency trading and gained a fair amount of experience. ![]() Airline stocks give up prior-day gains - MarketWatch 11 Mar 2010 at 8:40am Airline stocks give up prior-day gains MarketWatch NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Airline stocks declined Thursday after the sector benchmark reached a two-year high in prior day trading. ... Airline stocks fall; IATA raises global forecastMarketWatch Airline stocks climb with Delta, US AirwaysMarketWatch all 46 news articles » Strategy: Success in the market often comes down to taking the long view - Fi... 11 Mar 2010 at 10:17am Strategy: Success in the market often comes down to taking the long view Financial Times They are less likely to be ?distracted? by the intraday movements and vagaries of a day's trading, he says. But risk management is crucial, experts say. ... Technical analysis: Heads, shoulders, tops and lowsFinancial Times all 2 news articles » Options Trader Alert for Eastman Chemical Co (EMN) - Market Intellisearch 10 Mar 2010 at 4:53pm Options Trader Alert for Eastman Chemical Co (EMN) Market Intellisearch Eastman Chemical Co settled the day up $0.20 to $61.63 in the trading session. The day's trading range is between $60.80 and $61.86 respectively. ... Price Alert for Life Technologies Corp (LIFE)Market Intellisearch Daily Options Trading for Credit Suisse Group AG (CS)Market Int... |
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