5/17/2009

Day Trading for Beginners (Part 2)

In my previous post I talked about day trading for beginners and how important it is for you to know what you’re getting ginto when you begin day trading. Actually, make that BEFORE you even begin to get into day trading. The thing that I want to focus on with this post is how important it is for you to commit to eduating yourself about trading. Education is the most vital element of your trading career; you should never stop learning, no matter how many years of experience you rack up as a day trader. Gaining a solid trading education will build the confidence in you to really take calculated risks with your trading. But if you’re really more of an “action person” that would rather dive in without properly educating yourself first, you’re going to pay for it with cold hard cash. I can tell you from experience that that’s not the best way to go. Having blown several accounts out already, I believe I’m qualified to tell you that a little patience goes a long way. Whether you trade the stock markets, Forex or the commodtity markets, the basic principles are the same—you’re better off taking your time paper trading for a while & learning the markets before you commit real money to it. Don’t get me wrong, there’s no substitute for real-world experience when it comes to trading, and emotions are totally different when paper trading vs. real money trading, but still it’s a good thing to do just to take time & learn the “personality” of whatever market you’re in. There are many day traders that focus on only one market and do their best to “master” its movements and nuances…that can be advantageous because it helps you to keep from getting distracted and becoming the “jack of all trades but master of none”. I have a trader friend who only trades the E-mini S & P 500 and he kills it on a regular basis. Many traders who adopt the “tunnel vision” style note that you can learn a market’s peak hours and regular movements upon open or close if you stick to studying just that one market. For instance, for a little stint I was day trading Corn, and I noticed that Corn’s volume normally is huge right at the open, and then lulls during the early-to-mid-afternoon time period, and then jumps again within an hour before close. I also learned that if any real move was going to be made, it would happen during the first two hours of market open. I have had instances where I have made $250.00 in a matter of ten minutes just by sliding in & out of Corn. This is definitely not a science, but an art. Some would debate me even saying that about day trading; yes, I agree that it can be standardized and put into neat formulas by very smart people, but I do just fine by keeping it on the “art” side.

Looking back on what I’ve written so far, I realize that I didn’t actually stick to my initial intedned topic which was education for beginner day traders, but hey, you can’t win ‘em all. I’m signing off, but I know that I’ll continue to cover more day trading for beginner topics with some future posts.