I have noticed a lot of recent advertising regarding day trading, however I know very little about it. Are actual shares ever purchased through day trading accounts? Or is this simply a form of gambling ( betting higher or lower ) against the spread the trading provider is offering on that day?
If it is purely gambling surely on average there is not money to be made as like sport betting the bookie always wins unless you know alot more that the average investor / punter??
I was reading Richard Farleighs book today (the Australian guy who used to be on dragons den). He managed to amass a large amount of personal wealth in the past decade, mostly through managing hedge funds, speculating on currency movements and personal investments.
He is quite a clever chap, he got a first class honours in economics from his University, and used his intelligence and wit in the real world to make a lot of money. He is very considered in his opinions, his book is a nice read.
He makes the point in his book that day traders are just gamblers. He has never tried it because he is not a gambler. He reckons the only people who can successfully on a regular basis make money from day trading are people "at the coal face" i.e. traders who get a picture of orders in advance (which may signal an increase in demand and a share price rise over the course of a day etc).
The costs incurred in buying and selling shares (broker fees/taxes) is quite high, buying and selling shares for a profit within a day or week makes it very hard to make a profit obviously.
If Richard Farleigh doesn't do day tranding, then I for one wouldn't try it either.
I dont see how the average investor can make money, unless they trade a few times and get very lucky. I'm sure the providers on the service offers a spread with their margins in between...and that they manage that spread depending on which way their clients are betting...so therefore the real winners are the trader providers and maybe some very smart investors who are in a position to know whats going on in the market a long time before the average investor does.
With other forms of gambling, this also plays on humun nature where people think they are lucky or a better judge / investor than the average person. For example if you ask 1000 drivers to rate their driving skills out of 100...the average result will be much higher than 50...when it shound not be!
If I'm wrong and the average investor does make money...then who funds this money they make??? The providers?? It would apear to me that the average investor funds the money the providers and top investors make!
The talk of managing your losses isnt that simple, as you do still have losses...the point where you "cut your losses". Also you will have to pay charges, etc which mean a further loss. Doing this ever day would be very costly!
If you look at if from a probability point of view, day traders are climbing a very steep mountain.
Imagine if the long term average return on the stock exchange is 20% per annum. (in reality it's much less than 20% of course).
This is roughly a 0.055% increase every day.
Every €100 invested would return about 5 cents every day. This would be an excellent average rate of return.
If a day trader with no special knowledge invests €100 in a random company, the probability is that s/he will sell at the €100.05 at the end of the day.
I don't know what the commission is when buying and selling, but I'm sure you probably lose a 1/2 % in total when buying and selling.
So instead of getting €100.05 at the end of the day, the probability is that you would get €99.55 (if the market is rising at an average of 20% per annum).
Unless someone has insider knowledge (and using insider knowledge is of course illegal), or knowledge which is not known to the market, nobody can possibly make a profit from day trading in the long term, the laws of probability make it impossible.
If you look at if from a probability point of view, day traders are climbing a very steep mountain.
Imagine if the long term average return on the stock exchange is 20% per annum. (in reality it's much less than 20% of course).
This is roughly a 0.055% increase every day.
Every €100 invested would return about 5 cents every day. This would be an excellent average rate of return.
If a day trader with no special knowledge invests €100 in a random company, the probability is that s/he will sell at the €100.05 at the end of the day.
I don't know what the commission is when buying and selling, but I'm sure you probably lose a 1/2 % in total when buying and selling.
So instead of getting €100.05 at the end of the day, the probability is that you would get €99.55 (if the market is rising at an average of 20% per annum).
Unless someone has insider knowledge (and using insider knowledge is of course illegal), or knowledge which is not known to the market, nobody can possibly make a profit from day trading in the long term, the laws of probability make it impossible.
It is irresponsible to say that trading is simple, it is not, it is actually extremely very hard, and not for the faint hearted, or those who don't want to gamble, as it is gambling, and nothing we say can change that fact.
WHile I agree with a lot of what you say, i disagree with the statement that it is gambling.
YEs - it can be gambling - but doesn't have to be.
ANy serious trader wll have backtested their system and will have calculated their systems epectancy.
I'm not usre if you have calculated teh expectancy of your systen but if you take the daytrading seriously i'm sure you have.
And anyone that uses a systme with a good positive expectancy combined with good money management can stack the odds in their favour.
Yes - ytou are quite right in that the number of opportunities is also crucial to the system.
However - when you use the term gambling it suggests to me that if you win then you are lucky.
There are many people who trade succsssfuly on a consistent basis.
These cannot be said to be lucky.
Yes - any one individual trade is a bet - but putting all these bets together can take the luck element out of it.
E.g. if someone offered to pay ne 6/4 on heads and even money on tails that means the odds are stacked in my favoiur if i constantky call heads.
And on any individual flick of a coin there is still a 50/50 chnce of success/failure.
i.e. each individual flick is a gamble.
However - it i employ good money management and always choose heads them I will eventually win due the expectancy of 0.2. => not gambling.
Firstly, there is no such thing as "luck", and if someone enters the world of trading with this in their mind they are doomed to failure.
Every thing happens for a reason; the problem is that, it is very hard to logically work out the reason, prior to the event happening, in the majority of situations.
We can say, using math’s, that if an object is projected at a window, from a distance of 20M, and the object travels at a speed of 1 m/sec, then the window will be smashed in exactly 20 seconds from the time it is projected.
BUT - what about all of the variables that can happen!
What if we got a sudden wind gust blowing in the direction directly opposite the path of the projected object, we now might hit and break the glass in 19.99 seconds, so, whereas we thought we could tell the future with certainty, using our math equations, we now find that in order to do so we need to take some other unknown variables into account.
What if a tree fell in the path of the projected object and stopped it dead in its tracks - the window would never get broken!
What if, what if, what if?
The only thing that we can be certain of is that we are now in the present. The past is gone, so we can't experience that, and the future is not here yet, so that also can't be experienced.
A person can do whatever they so desire in the present moment, they have no control over what they will do in the future, no matter how hard they try to think otherwise, as it is just not possible.
To make/lose money trading stocks you only need to do 2 of 3 things.
1. You buy/sell at price A
2. You sell/buy at price B above A
3. You sell/buy at price C below A
The problems arise in the way the person thinks when they are in a trade - like the window, they think that they know exactly when the glass is going to break, but nothing is further from the truth, and anyone who thinks like this is not in the real world, even though they think they are, and funny enough, most seem to think this way
Hi NikolazTesla, After lots of homework and investment type trading I am now doing some day/short term trading and agree with many of your points. The money I have made/lost has been nothing to do with good or bad luck but me simply not reading the market correctly - trading what I think it should be doing rather than what it actually is doing on that day, once the market opens you have to leave your opinions elsewhere and react quickly to what the market is telling you. I am spending a lot of time learning to read charts and am interested in your statement:
"All short term trading success hinges on the traders ability to read a chart, and I don’t mean the type of chart reading that is out there for the majority, with the myriad of TA indicators such as MACD, Stochs, RSI, CCI, etc, etc."
I'd love to know what kind of charts you are reading. If you are not using the typical TA indicators what do you use to assist you b e a good day trader?
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