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Day
Trading Basics
By Sunny J. Harris
Human nature! What a continual marvel. Everyone
wants something for nothing, or at least fairly cheap. Quick fixes,
free lunches, easy riches. Not to mention the "for dummies" books to
tell you how to do it in 21 minutes.
That is what this
article is Not about
While this article addresses that very same audience, it is with a
great deal of concern for these people that I write as often as I
can to get the word out about the realities of trading.
It is my hope that
you will read on and realize several things: Trading is not for
everyone, you can lose lots of money trading and trading can make
you lots of money, if you plan, study and work hard.
Instant Gratification
The appeal of day-trading and its overwhelming popularity of
late stems from its easy accessibility and WYSIWYG (what you see is
what you get) profits. Nothing appeals to the masses more than the
promise of easy money and get-rich-quick schemes. Just look at the
advertisements. They don't say "danger, danger," they say "profit,
money, %-return, easy." Day-trading is the junk food, drive-thru
answer to investing. It happens quickly and satisfies the customer's
craving for instant gratification.
There are few jobs at which it is more difficult
to make a living than trading! Most people would make more money
working at McDonald's for minimum wage than trading. Estimates are
that 80% to 90% of all those who begin trading today will lose their
trading capital within the next 12 months. That said, let me now get
to the fun part - the homework. If you study diligently, read the
works of "the masters," plan your work and work your plan, you can
make a decent living trading right from your desk at home. With your
computer, that is.
The Internet, offering instant communication for
everyone across the world, has lifted barriers to transportation as
dramatically as the airplane did in the last century. As we turn the
decade, and enter a new millennium, we tackle transportation issues
by telecommuting in every imaginable walk of life. We talk over the
Internet, order food, computers, clothing, movie tickets and bid for
everything imaginable online at eBay auctions. And now, we are doing
away with stock exchanges and replacing them with online electronic,
instant fills.
Officially, "day-trading" is the act of trading
during the daily market hours and closing all of your trades before
the market closes each day. You don't "take a trade home." That is,
you have no open positions at the end of the day. The fundamental
premise of day-trading is that the market (whatever you are
watching) will move enough during the day for you to make a profit.
Not too long ago, the Dow Jones Industrial Average might have moved
20 or 30 points in a week. Now, if it only moved 20 or 30 points in
a day, it was a pretty flat day. To make a living at day-trading,
you need the large daily point moves. This is referred to as
volatility. Without volatility, a day-trader cannot make money.
The typical day-trader looks for a few points
movement in a few stocks and trades them several times during the
day. They "make it up in volume." So, if you traded 1,000 shares of
eBay on July 28, 1999, and you had caught all the ideal trades, you
would have bought 1,000 shares at 99 and sold a few minutes later at
102. A few minutes would have passed, and you would have bought
1,000 shares again at 99 and sold them an hour later at 106. Later
in the afternoon, you would have bought the same 1,000 shares again
at 103, and sold them at 106.
In this example, you would need a sizable
account, with at least $99,000 in it. (They don't usually tell you
this part when they call it "easy money.") But, by the end of the
day you could have made a tidy $13,000 profit, for a hefty 13%
return, in a day. Not bad for a day's work.
If you could do that every day, you would turn an
incredible 3,000% return per year. That's where the excitement and
glamour comes from. We all want to believe we will win the lottery.
What if you have a smaller account, can you still
play? Sure. Most brokerage firms, and that includes the day-trading
firms, have a minimum account size they will accept. Many firms
require $100,000 to open an account, but some have lowered the
requirement to $25,000. Let's look at the example above with a
smaller account in mind.
With $25,000 you would be trading 250 shares at a
time, not 1,000. You have still turned the same 13% profit for the
day, because your $3,250 profit is on an account size of $25,000.
But now, your dollar earnings look meager in comparison to the
$13,000 per day of the first example. But, remember it is still the
same 13%, which becomes 3,000% per year.
How Much Is Enough?
Before entering into the day-trading (or even the trading)
arena, it is advisable for you to create a business plan for your
new venture. Don't start counting your chickens before the eggs have
hatched. (Which reminds me to take a second look at my Egghead
Software [EGGS] stock.)
Do you know how much a million dollars per year
is? There are approximately 250 trading days in a year, so $4,000
per day would net you $1,000,000 per year. Taken with that view, it
seems a more achievable goal.
Crystal Balls and
Soothsayers
You will never be able to predict the market. You might make a
few holes-in-one, but you won't do it every time. You won't even do
it regularly. No one can. So, your best bet is to follow the market,
because you certainly aren't going to lead it.
Somehow, novice traders think they can come to
the market unprepared and beat the pros, who have been doing this
for years. Believe me; we will use all the education, experience and
computer power we have to see that we walk away winners at the end
of the day.
Your trump card in day-trading consists of two
components: discipline and method. The most difficult practice for
every trader is discipline. If you can master this single element,
you will be ahead of 99% of all traders. Having the discipline to
repeat your proven strategy, day after day, is the single most
important facet of successful trading.
If you can develop a simple method that will
produce a steady, though small, profit regularly - and follow it
religiously - you will be the trader who walks away consistently
winning.
Ockham's Razor: "Pluralitas non
est ponenda sine neccesitate." Attributed to William of
Ockham (1285-1349) this saying loosely translates to "keep it
simple, stupid." The true translation is more like "plurality should
not be posited without necessity." Another frequently seen corollary
to this axiom is "the simpler solution is the truer solution."
The simpler the solution to a problem, the more
likely it is to continue working into the future. Complex, intricate
solutions rarely continue to work as the market makes its inevitable
changes as time marches on. The simpler your solution is, the more
likely you are to follow it. And, the simpler your solution is, the
less the classical elements of fear and greed will enter into your
trading.
What's Next?
If you are willing to take the time and do the homework,
day-trading can become a profitable venture. Getting there is just
like getting to Carnegie Hall: practice, practice, and practice.
If you are not willing to suffer the pangs of
loss while learning, then invest in a good educator to help smooth
the path. If you think this is a road to easy riches, give it up.
It’s a long, hard road with lots of losses and educational expense
along the way.
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Sunny Harris has been
trading for over 24 years. She is a computer programmer,
mathematician, and was rated #1 trader in the under $10
million category by Stark Research, achieving a 365% profit
in 1994.
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