Tagged: Day Trading, Risks
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boringinvestor.
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January 24, 2022 at 4:30 pm #14306
boringinvestor
ModeratorDay trading is a highly glamorized form of making money these days. The psychological brain response to day trading is similar to Gambling as it looks potentially lucrative in many ways. Some of the most common emotions traders experience include fear, nervousness, conviction, excitement, greed and overconfidence.
Letās keep it real- day trading is a bad idea for most people. If I keep you from taking up day trading because itās the wrong thing for you to do, then I have done my duty. It requires a strong personality; someone who can face the gyrations of the markets day in and day out. And it also requires someone with enough attention to detail to run a full time business. Itās a great career option for the right person in the right circumstances. But for people who have trouble keeping cool or who donāt have the patience to learn how to trade, and for anyone who has a gambling problem, day trading can be a quick road to ruin.
Here are eleven signs that may indicate day trading isnāt right for you right now.
1. You want to discover investing through day trading-
Many people want to manage their own investments. Although doing so is certainly possible, you first need to take the time to learn about the basics of finance, such as the relationship between risk and return, proper diversification, and time horizons that are appropriate to your situation. Some people confuse investing with day trading, though, and these two disciplines are not the same. Day trading involves rapid buying and selling of securities to take advantage of small movements in prices. This can be a successful strategy for part of your investment account, but day trading with all your money isnāt a good idea.
2. You love fundamental research-
Fundamental research is the process of analyzing a company to see how good its business is and what the companyās securities are worth. Fundamental analysts crunch numbers, build forecasts, check out products, and look for stocks that are going to do well over the long term. They dream of uncovering the next Google or the next Walmart and holding the stock all the way up.
Fundamental research is antithetical to day trading. Day traders look for profit opportunities in short-term price movements. They often do not know what industry a company is in, nor do they care. If you love the fundamentals, youāre probably too analytical to be a good day trader.
3. Youāre short on time and capital-
Getting started in day trading is a lot like buying a small business. It takes commitment of both time and of money. If you donāt have enough time, learning technical patterns is difficult. If you donāt have the money, you wonāt be able to work through rough cycles. And there will be rough cycles. Thatās day tradingās only sure thing.
4. You like working as part of a group-
A decade ago, most large cities had day trading offices, called trading arcades, where traders could go each day to buy and sell securities. The big advantage these firms offered was high-speed Internet access. Now almost everyone can get high-speed Internet access at home, so thereās little need for day traders to go elsewhere, and most of these offices are closed.
Working at home is great for some people. If you prefer camaraderie during the day, like the support of a team, and want friendly faces around you, youāre likely to be miserable day trading. Itās just you and the market, and the market doesnāt have a great sense of humor.
5. You canāt be bothered with the details of running a business-
Day traders are small-business people, and their entrepreneurial flair goes beyond making their own buy and sell decisions. They also buy equipment, shop for supplies, and maintain careful income tax records. To some, this is exhilarating. No more mean office manager who decides how many and what kind of pens must be used. No more going through hoops and bringing in letters from a doctor to get a fancy ergonomic chair. Youāre the boss, and if you want it, you can have it.
But to others, all this responsibility is overwhelming. Picking out pens? Creating backup procedures? Worrying about accounting software? Itās too much. If the mere thought of standing at the office-supply store gives you the heebie-jeebies, you may want to consider trading as an employee rather than trading for your own account.
6. You crave excitement-
Trading seems so exciting. Youāve seen the stereotypical picture of the people on the floor at the Chicago Board of Trade, wearing bright-colored jackets and loud ties, screaming and waving their arms. It gets my blood pumping just thinking about it. Of course, they were probably shouting out coffee orders and waving their arms in a debate over the Cubs versus the Sox. And anyway, floor trading is mostly obsolete.
Most of the large stock, bond, and derivative exchanges have gone through mergers and reduced the square footage of their trading floors because of changes in how people trade. Nowadays, most traders sit in offices in front of computer screens. They have to stay focused on the little blips in front of them, and it can be deathly dull. Some days few, if any, opportunities come up to trade using your system.
If you crave excitement and have trouble staying focused, you may find that day trading is too boring for you. It can involve intense stress with few opportunities to work it off during the day.
7. Youāre impulsive-
With the frenzy of trades and the rapid-fire decisions involved, day trading may seem like a perfect career for an impulsive person. Itās all about instinct, about acting on your hunches, about pulling the trigger and seeing what happens. Right? Uh, no. To be a good day trader, you have to trust your trading system more than your hunches. Sometimes youāll make trades when it doesnāt seem right and youāll sit out periods even though you are itching to get in. Good day traders are quick thinkers, but they do think. If you like to act now and deal with the consequences later, then day trading isnāt a good idea for you.
8. You love going to the casino-
Do you get a big rush out of gambling? Do you love trying to beat the odds? Does day trading seem just like a visit to Vegas without the airfare? Then you shouldnāt be day trading. Unlike at a casino, no one is going to give you free drinks or Celine Dion tickets in exchange for your massive losses.
A lot of traders like to gamble. Every trader has some crazy story about playing Liarās Poker using the serial numbers on dollar bills instead of with cards, or about a friend of a friend who bet on whether the person walking in front of him would turn right or left. And thatās fine, if they keep their gambling in perspective and bet no more than they can afford to lose.
Trading isnāt necessarily gambling, but it can be, especially if you get carried away with the market and donāt stick to your trading and money-management systems. But remember this: In gambling, the odds always favor the house. When you cross the line, you hand your profit potential over to someone else.
9. You have trouble setting boundaries-
Successful day traders are disciplined. They have set trading hours that they stick to and set systems they use to plan trades and manage their money. They took the time to carefully test their trading strategy. They understand that if they donāt have a system and manage their risk, they are more likely to become one of those numerous day traders who lose everything early on.
The whole idea behind day trading is that you limit risk by closing out your positions at the end of the day. The financial markets are global, though, so in theory, the trading day never ends. If you have a hard time turning off the lights at the end of the day, you may not be the best day trader. If you resent rules, you may rebel against the rules that youāve set for yourself.
10. You want to get rich quick-
Day traders look for short-term profit opportunities, so it follows that day trading leads to big, fast profits, right? Wrong. Day traders make money by collecting a large number of small profits. Those who make money usually do it through patience and persistence. Yeah, one or two day traders out there may have managed to make a killing in a week, but theyāre the exception.
11. The guy on YouTube said it would work-
A lot of money can be made in day trading, but sometimes it seems like more money is made selling day trading training systems. Some of these systems are heavily marketed online and even through television infomercials. The sales pitch makes day trading seem like an easy, safe, fun way to make money using your own smarts. These commercials leave out pesky details about researching and testing systems, high levels of risk, and the pressure trading can place on a person.
Day trading is great for some people. But like anything, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Donāt let a strong-arm sales pitch cost you your hard-earned money.
This article has been sourced from Ann C. Logue, MBA, is a lecturer in Finance at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation, and has written about business and finance for Barron’s, Entrepreneur, and InvestHedge as well as other publications. Visit her blog and website at http://www.annlogue.com.
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