Learn to Day Trade the Smart Way

What is day trading? Doesn’t everyone trade in the day? Well, traditionally yes, but the day trade is the financial term for when a trader or investor does his buying and selling of commodities or financial instruments on a single market day. All his or her positions and transactions get closed before the market closes on that particular day. All sorts of commodities can be traded this way; they include futures, interest rates, commodity futures, equities, stocks and bonds and even the Forex market.

For the Forex market - which is a true 24 hour market, day trade is when a trader chooses a certain continental market to trade in, and liquidates his investments on that particular day - for example, someone in Europe could be trading the Asian market exclusively in the EUR - USD commodities (currency), and thus wins or loses on a daily basis. His trading begins again on the following day and so on and so forth. While the day trading option is the mainstay of casual investors who usually do this at home or on leisure time, it is also the gold standard of banks and financial institutions. While day trading is a good option for a low risk, starting guide to investing, there are some pointers to learn to day trade the smart way.

The first thing you need to be able to do is to pinpoint the frequency of trade of a particular commodity you’re interested in investing in, and work out strategies ahead of time in order for you to be able to spot trading setups you can possibly capitalize on as you speculate in the market. Having a good strategy and knowledge of aspects like market frequency and psychology will help you have more and more trades (increased volume of trading) within a single day, sometimes over several markets, which means you can have a higher potential of making more profits. Don’t fall prey to the hype surrounding day trading and how you can make a ridiculous amount of money from it, to the point that you carelessly pump in a huge amount of investment capital into speculative commodities like futures or Forex.

While it may be true that there is a huge profit potential in day trading, the way you approach day trading should be the same way you approach a poker game; start small. Keep in mind that with day trading, the last thing you want to do is to let your profits run, but at the same time neither should you let your losses run either. You should trade in something that is almost certain, and with a smaller profit margin, you should always have good discipline and stick to tried and true strategies (while being flexible enough to change at the flip of a coin) and you should always have ‘risk capital’ on the side for a market bailout (to cover your losses); bad credit in the market stinks to high heaven and you might be barred from trading by your broker.

At the end of the day, it is about money management and it is slightly harder because this is when the market is more dynamic and the long term is not in the question. Once you have the discipline to run the market in the day trade, only then will you be successful.

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