Day Trading 101
eBook - ePub

Day Trading 101

From Understanding Risk Management and Creating Trade Plans to Recognizing Market Patterns and Using Automated Software, an Essential Primer in Modern Day Trading

David Borman

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  1. 256 pages
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

Day Trading 101

From Understanding Risk Management and Creating Trade Plans to Recognizing Market Patterns and Using Automated Software, an Essential Primer in Modern Day Trading

David Borman

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About This Book

A comprehensive guide to day trading, with prescriptive information and actionable advice to help you achieve financial success. It may seem that day trading is only for savvy investors who know the ins and outs of the marketplace—but it doesn't have to be. All it takes is the right information and staying on top of the market. Day Trading 101 simplifies all the terms, strategies, and processes involved in day trading, helping even the most novice investor find financial success. With information on recognizing trading patters, mastering trading options, keeping tabs on the market, establishing strategies to make the most profit, and understanding trading lingo, this guide can get you on track to becoming a smart investor. Full of expert advice on the best paths to trading success, Day Trading 101 leaves no stone unturned, and no trading option undiscovered.

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Information

Publisher
Adams Media
Year
2018
ISBN
9781507205822

Chapter 1

Introduction to Markets and Trading

Trading, day trading, and investing are terms that are used to describe the buying and selling of financial products that are traded electronically. Whether they be stocks, commodities such as oil or gold, or foreign currency, day traders and traders use computers to buy and sell in what is called the financial markets. Most people are familiar with the US markets such as the stock market, but the financial markets are worldwide, and it is possible to trade stocks from a European company, gold warehoused in Asia, or the currencies of developing nations. What ties them all together is that the trading is done electronically and can be done from your home computer or, in many cases, from your tablet or smartphone.

FUNCTIONS OF THE MARKETS

Market Makers and Market Pricing
The markets are the grouping of financial trading people, products, and platforms. By this I mean the market is the loose association of professional and personal traders and investors who carry out both short-term and long-term trades and investments in financial products such as stocks, foreign moneys, and commodities such as gold and oil. These are the market participants, buying and selling electronically or face to face, within the confines of the accepted rules and regulations of trading and investing. Keep in mind that the market refers to the industry as a whole, not just stocks, bonds, or other traded instruments.
Say the word markets, and most people think of the tumultuous “pits” that we often see on television and in pictures of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Dozens of traders are closely gathered, waving their hands wildly while yelling out buy and sell orders. These “pits” are on the floor of the stock exchanges. At these locations, the traders are sometimes market makers.

MARKET MAKERS

Market markers are traders whose profit is made from buying and selling all available stock in which they are dealers. They are the first to buy and sell all orders coming through the exchange floor for that stock, and they earn a commission on each trade. The downside of this is that if the market has a bad day, they still have to buy all shares of their specialty stock, whatever the price. This is true even if their order book is full and they have very few buyers. Market makers facilitate the efficient and orderly operation of the investment markets in good times and bad.
Many market makers work for large firms such as Morgan Stanley or Merrill Lynch; others are employed by private account holders who own a “seat” on the exchange. Having a seat allows them to put a person on the floor of the exchange to get in on the trading action.
On the floors of the exchanges, trades are often made in bulk orders of one thousand shares or more, but floor traders can handle smaller trades (hundred-share lots or even smaller). Floor traders trade for their own account or for firms that buy shares for their client’s accounts. In either case, the motivation of market makers is the access to all trades that come through the floor and a commission on each trade that they handle for clients. Market makers are strictly regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), and the National Futures Association (NFA). The SEC is the government body that polices, investigates, and prosecutes financial and market fraud in the United States. FINRA and NFA are self-governing industry watchdogs that monitor and regulate all US-based stock, foreign exchange market, and futures professionals.

Fiduciary Care


While market makers are a form of broker, only FINRA/NFA brokers registered to provide “care of custodial control of client accounts” are required to provide a fiduciary service: meaning only these registered brokers are required to put their client’s financial needs above their own.

Determining Price

In addition to providing a physical or electronic gathering place for buyers and sellers of financial products such as stocks, foreign currency, and futures, the world’s marketplaces help buyers and sellers determine the current price of what’s being traded. Trading screens scattered throughout the trading floor of the exchanges show a buy and a sell price for each stock. The prices are updated constantly so that traders can see what a trade is worth moment to moment, allowing them what is called price discovery. The buy prices are a bit higher than the sell prices; the difference between the buy/sell is called bid/ask spread.
If you are selling a stock, you’ll get the bid price; if you are buying a stock, you’ll get the ask price. If you’re buying a stock, it will cost more than you would get if you had the same stock and you were selling. The difference between the two prices, the spread, is pocketed by the dealers and floor brokers as their profit for the service of being market makers. Financial products that are traded in massive quantities daily usually have a tight spread: the difference between the buying and selling price is very small, or tight.
For example, if you were to buy one hundred shares of Apple stock (AAPL) at $101.50 per share and instantly sold all one hundred of those AAPL shares, your sales price would be about $101.40. You would instantly lose ten cents per share, for a total loss of $10 on the trade. This difference in price is the amount that the dealer or floor broker makes on the trade. Remember, the floor brokers make money with every buy and sell order that comes across their order book—it doesn’t matter if you lost money on the trade. Each trading day, there are thousands of buy and sell orders, and the floor brokers earn a small sliver of profit on each trade they handle for their clients.
The volume at which shares or other financial products are traded is referred to as their liquidity. The more liquid a product is (i.e., the more often it is traded), the less the spread. The more illiquid a product is (i.e., the less it is traded), the wider the spread.

Bid/Ask Spreads Vary Widely


Spreads can vary widely between traded products: the spread of an electronically traded futures contract for 100 ounces of gold could be as little as $10. At the same time, the spread of 100 ounces of actual gold bullion from a reputable precious metals dealer could be as high as $30 per ounce, or $3,000.

PRIMARY AND SECONDARY MARKETS

Two other terms you’ll hear as you learn more about trading are primary market and secondary market. The primary market is where new stocks and bonds are first made available for public purchase. When a company is raising cash for operations for the first time, investors can pay cash for an equity ownership stake in the company, which is embodied in shares of stock. In return, the owners of the company give up a percentage of control of their company to the investors. The company then takes the cash and uses the money to grow further. This initial sale of stock is called an initial public offering, or IPO.
Once the stock has been sold, it becomes a part of the secondary market, where it can be traded among investors and day traders with very few or no restrictions. Most times this is done through a brokerage account or an online trading platform. As a day trader, the financial products you will be trading will all be offered on the secondary market—you will be day trading by buying and selling on the exchanges through your brokerage trading platform. Your trading platform will differ depending upon the product you trade, whether it’s stocks, foreign exchange, or futures. Not only are these different products, but each brokerage firm will offer its own. The basics will all be the same though: order entry, notations as to available purchasing limits, and each gain and or loss of every trade. The displays range from the very simple to the complex. Some professional traders use up to eight full computer screens at once: some for order entry, others for charting and market-related information.
The money paid for a trade is given to the previous owner of the stock, and the purchasing trader receives the stock. The company that originally issued the stock never receives any money from the secondary market. The only time the company receives the money from the sale of stock is when it’s initially sold on the primary market. From then on, traders and investors buy and sell stock from their own accounts, and only to each other.

WHO’S WHO IN THE MARKETPLACE

Banks, Hedge Funds, and Trading Houses
Before you start searching the market, looking for trades, and living the often thrilling life of a day trader, it’s best to know a little something about the institutions that are integral to the world’s stock, currency, and commodities markets.

INVESTMENT BANKS

Within the world’s marketplace of stocks, bonds, mutual funds, futures, and currency, there are a few key players. The first of these is the investment banks. These are at the top of the food chain in the trading business. This is because when companies are raising capital for the first time, it is the investment banks that write and prepare the documents, provide advice, and help “place” the initial run of stock that the company will offer. (“Place” in this context means the first listing of the stock on the stock exchange ever, thereafter available to the public to buy in their trading accounts for investment or trading.) As discussed earlier, if the company is raising capital on the stock exchanges for the first time, the first shares of stock sold to the public are called an IPO, or initial public offering. These IPOs are very complex. The company will hire an investment bank to determine how many shares will be sold, at what price, and if any other legal contracts will be tied to the shares. The bank will then use its vast connections in the investment world to find buyers of the stock at the initial price. This is the price it will sell at when the company goes public.
Investment banks have first dibs on the stock and will sell large blocks to their best customers. Many times regular traders can own shares of the new stock after it has debuted on the exchange and is therefore trading live.

HEDGE FUNDS

The second group of players in the markets is hedge funds. These are privately owned trading houses that invest both their owner’s monies and their customer’s monies at highly leveraged amounts. Not only are hedge funds highly leveraged pools of investment money, but they also use several different trading styles as well. These range from higher-level views of the world’s trading environments (such as Global Macro funds), which trade any financial product with a “no restraints” policy on where gains can be captured, to derivative-only funds (managed futures funds) that are designed to make money when stocks go up or down in value (long/short funds), or even special situations funds (leveraged buyouts, or distressed asset funds, which only buy stocks in companies that are undergoing trauma: management takeovers, bankruptcies, fiscal trouble, etc.

Hedge Funds and Regulation


One reason hedge funds are attractive to investors is that they’re less regulated by the SEC than many other financial institutions. However, in the wake of several significant scandals such as accusations at SAC Capital in 2010 of insider trading, that situation has begun to change, and there are more attempts by government agencies to oversee hedge funds.

These hedge funds can be massive buyers and sellers in the finance world. They sometimes use both equity and derivative positions to diversify their accounts to a very sophisticated level. These days, most hedge funds also use computer modeling and statistical programs to help determine and capture the best trades with the least trading risk. Overall, hedge funds are managed by the most sophisticated and powerful day traders and position traders in today’s world markets. They play often and big. Hedge fund buying and selling can move the markets up or down. People take notice when a rumor of a large hedge fund making a trade is in the news. This is because most hedge funds are very secretive in nature—not only are their inner workings and methods kept quiet, but the fund managers keep a low profile as well—which only adds to the mystique of working for or investing in them.

Hedge Fund Performance

The major wealth management firms heavily recommend hedge funds of all investment styles. Some houses such as UBS and Morgan Stanley recommend that 15–20 percent of an investment portfolio should be invested in alternative investments for proper diversification and risk/reward profile. Of this 15–20 percent, hedge funds are included along with other forms of complex alternative investments, such as private equity and derivative funds.
Hedge fund performance has gone up and down over the years; they generally do best when the world’s stock markets and economies are in turmoil. They are designed to offer maximum diversification to an overall investment portfolio and are built with layers of diversification. If the equity markets of the world are all doing well and European, US, and Asian markets are doing well, then traders and investors will most likely earn more and do better with a unidirectional, nondiversified trading strategy. In this market condition, stocks will generally move in one direction most of the time. While there may be up-and-down days, on average the market will move in one direction over weeks and months (or even years!).
In other words, economies that have great stock markets are great for day trading. Not only that, but simpler trading strategies work the best. Unidirectional and nondiversified, long-only equities or equity futures can be the best and highest performing trading strategies. Keep it simple! Buy low, sell high. If the market seems to go up every day, then go long only (buy low and sell higher). This is easy to understand and simple to set up on your trading platform. Currently the markets are conducive to simplified trading strategies. ...

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