Day-Trading.Moneyclopedia.com - Day Trading Stock Market Section

 



Day Trading Stock Market - Navigation


Day Trading Stock Tip
Day Trading Strategies For Futures Market
Day Trading Help
Day Trading Tools
Day Trading System
Day Trading Companies
Daytrading Information
Daytrading Firms
Etf Daytrading
Building Day Trading System
Forex Day Trading System
Day Trading Emini
Online Day Trading
Day Trading Information
Day Trading Online Broker
Day Trading Penny Stock
Day Trading Forum
Day Trading Psychology
Day Trading Penny Stock Tips
Daytrading Information
Day Trading Forum
Currency Day Trading
Day Trading Advice
Forex Day Trading Signal
Day Trading Classes


2005 Best Seller!

During the past 18 years, I've been quietly testing, tweaking, and fine-tuning a simple step-by-step system for making money in the stock market

Buy it now


Best Day Trading Stock Market products

Online trading for Financial Freedom - stock daytrading strategy
Stock index trading strategy for beginning and experienced traders alike.

Make money stock trading, day trading, investing and trading options like the pros!
Turn $200 into $4,630 in 30 days by trading options online from your home PC. Step by step instructions for novices or investment pros.

Day trading Freedom
Learn how to make a living by trading the stock market for just a few hours each day.

Stock & Commodity trading
Easily spot market turning points in Stocks and Commodities. Fibonacci and Gann price and time secrets and software. Free 7 day e-mail course.

Intelligent stock trading
A how to guide showing you step by step how to at the very least double your investment every twelve months in the stock Market.


 

 

Latest Day Trading Stock Market link added

Also check our Moneyclopedia Retirement section!


 

Welcome to Day-Trading.Moneyclopedia.com

 

Day Trading Stock Market Article

Emotions: A Trader's Worst Enemy; Get Rid of Fear and Greed - You'll be Glad You Did
Jonathan van Clute

Copyright 2005 Jonathan van Clute

You hear it over and over and over in books, forums, and chatrooms. Fear and greed, fear and greed, fear and greed. Emotions are a trader’s worst enemy. What are we supposed to do about it? We are human after all. Human beings have emotions. We can’t just throw a switch and suddenly behave like “Data” on Star Trek the Next Generation.

So what’s the answer for the aspiring trader?

It all boils down to 2 main components:

1. Having a plan

2. Having an appropriate trading style

You hear the first point often. Obnoxious little phrases like “Plan your trade, Trade your plan” are thrown around like it was really just that simple. But without the second part, the first part is useless. What good is a plan if you don’t know what type of plan is appropriate?

For example, you could plan your commute to work expecting to make the 30 mile trip in 20 minutes, but if you’re on foot that plan isn’t going to work very well is it? The plan was simply not appropriate for you in that situation.

There are an unlimited number of possible trading methods and styles, from chart reading to fundamental analysis, cycles to Fibonacci retracements, intra-day, Dogs of the DOW, Options, Futures, FOREX, Pork Bellies, Arbitrage – it can make you feel like your head will explode! But what you trade does not matter nearly as much as how, or perhaps why you trade.

Why do you trade?

Are you the sort who likes to play video games, loves fast action, and has no problem being glued to a screen all day? Then maybe intra-day trading 1 and 5 minute charts of high volatility equity options is for you.

Rather check your trades maybe every few days, or maybe once a week? Then perhaps swing trading currency pairs is more your style.

Prefer sleeping easy at all times, never worrying in the least about your trades because you knew up front that they would profit? Then my friend, arbitrage trading is calling your name.

Every style has its advantages and disadvantages, its risks and rewards, but most important is that the style must match the trader. If you jump into trading believing that just because someone else can do it this way, then so can you – you may be in for a very painful surprise.

Never trade someone else’s plan. Never trade someone else’s style. You absolutely must know your own temperament well enough to determine what you will trade, and exactly how you will trade it. Your money management rules, your tolerance for losses, i.e. costs, , your willingness to change the trade if your market opinion is proven wrong – these are the true secrets to trading that separate the novice from the veteran. With these in place, emotions can be reduced if not eliminated.

After all, which would put you most at ease? Driving through an unfamiliar city alone with no guidance, driving with a map, or driving with a full color street-level-detail GPS navigation system?

I’ll take the GPS, thank you.

So before you place your first, or next, trade, consider the following:

a. Do you understand what you are trading and why?

b. Do you know what you will do given any of the possible outcomes?

c. Are you ready and willing to admit you were wrong about the trade, and if so what will you do about it and when?

d. Are you comfortable with the thought of losing the money you are putting into the trade, and will your trading account survive to trade another day if you do?

These are all part of what you need to have in your plan. I urge you to have considered them thoroughly before risking the slightest amount of money in a real trade.

Emotions – “You can’t trade with ‘em, and you must trade without ‘em.”

About the Author

Jonathan van Clute is a full time investor, educator, speaker, and online options and sports arbitrage trader. In addition to his business activities, he is also a musician, video editor/animator, and one of the world's greatest Segway Polo athletes. He can be reached via email at jonathan@PMLinvestments.com and is speaking at an upcoming teleseminar, visit http://www.snurl.com/vcbio for details.


Other Day Trading Stock Market related resources

Also check our Moneyclopedia Retirement section!


Day Trading Stock Market News

EIH soars despite dim market conditions (Business Standard India)

Despite weak market conditions, shares of EIH galloped 17 per cent to close the day at Rs 99.65 on the National Stock Exchange (NSE). The counter witnessed trading volumes of 22,39,179 shares vis-a-vis the two-week average of 31,009 shares.

Read more...


Saudi stocks plunge in week's first trading day (AFP via Yahoo! News)

The stock market in oil powerhouse Saudi Arabia, the largest in the Arab world, slumped heavily on the first trading day of the week on Saturday, when shares ended 7.4 percent lower.

Read more...


Japanese market closes lower; Nikkei sheds 0.7% (Nasdaq)

(RTTNews) - The Japanese stock market closed lower on Wednesday, extending its losses for a second straight trading session. The key Nikkei 225 index fell to a one-week closing low, hit by a stronger yen and fears that a bailout of U.S. automakers might not come through.

Read more...


Japanese market trades lower despite Wall Street rally (Nasdaq)

(RTTNews) - The Japanese stock market was trading lower on Wednesday as fears about a deepening global recession offset the positive impact from the overnight rally on Wall Street.

Read more...


Yahoo stock rises amid buyout talk (The Charlotte Observer)

(By Brian Womack and Ian King, Bloomberg) Yahoo! Inc., owner of the second-largest U.S. Internet-search engine, rose 8.7 percent in Nasdaq trading on Tuesday after Chief Executive Officer Jerry Yang agreed to step down, opening the door for a fresh Microsoft Corp. bid. Yahoo, based in Sunnyvale, Calif., climbed 92 cents to $11.55 on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The gain was the largest in a month. ...

Read more...


Taiwan Market Due For Recovery (Nasdaq)

(RTTNews) - The Taiwan stock market has finished lower now in two consecutive sessions and in six of the last seven trading days, sinking to a fresh five-year closing low in the process.

Read more...


Australian market trades lower (Nasdaq)

(RTTNews) - The Australian stock market was trading lower Wednesday, at fresh four-year lows, despite a triple-digit gain on Wall Street overnight. According to market analysts, the resumption of short selling in non-financial stocks triggered the fall in the market.

Read more...