Developing a stock trading strategy that is compatible with your needs, expectations, and personality is the single-most important component of stock trading. First, determine your threshold for risk. Are you comfortable with making short-term investments and paying close attention to the ups and downs of the stock market?
Even factors such as age can have an impact on the decisions you make in stock trading. A few stock trading strategies used today are:
Day Trading - An intraday trader is a person who buys and sells during the day. They make most of their purchases throughout the day. This strategy allows you avoid overnight hold exposures. This gives you the advantage of both longs and shorts during the quick swings that may move up or down throughout the day.
You may reduce your risk of losing money by focusing on a greater percentage of winning trades by accepting faster profits. These profits are smaller due to the smaller risk. This strategy also has it downsides. It requires a lot of effort, time, and work. You must always be giving the market your attention during trading hours. The cost may be higher as you will be trading stocks at a high rate.
Swing Trading - Instead of day trading, you can hold your position in the market longer, for days or weeks, and look for opportunities to make larger profits. This type of trading is called swing trading. Because you are making fewer trades, you don't incur as many commission charges. The profits can be larger and you are less likely to be pressured into making a mistake.
Swing traders frequently use technical analysis to determine when they should buy and sell a stock. The key points are identified based on the percentage of profit that the swing trader wishes to hit. It is important to keep in mind that typically the higher the percentage, the higher the risk. Because you are making fewer trades, you do have to go for a higher profit on each trade, so this additional risk has to be taken into account. In addition, you have to consider the risks associate to be exposed to market fluctuations for a longer period of time.
Long-Term Swing Trading - If you take this approach, you are basically following the same strategy as the swing trader described above, except that you hold the stocks longer. Trades are usually made over a period of months. You can use this approach to trading when focusing on stock indexes and mutual funds, or through technical and fundamental analysis of individual stocks.
The advantage to taking a longer-term approach is that you avoid being distracted by noise in the data, which occurs in all markets. Small fluctuations are less important because you are looking at longer-term trends, though you cannot ignore them entirely. Again, the longer you are holding the position, the greater the profit percentage you need to shoot for. In the case of long-term swing trading, you may want to set a profit target much higher than those found in day trading. The disadvantage to this approach is that you are not well positioned to capitalize on any short-term movements in the market, and your risk may grow with the amount of time the stock is held.
Buy and Hold Trading - In this approach, you hold stocks for years at a time. If you choose them correctly, you can make a good profit with very little cost or effort beyond the initial selection of the stocks. Unfortunately, in many cases this approach is more aptly named the "buy and forget" strategy.
Buy and Hold Trading also known as Buy and Forget trading. These stocks may be bought and held for years. Using the right approach, this can be a lucrative option.
Today, many online newsletters for stock trading tips are available, whether for playing the stock market online, or the old fashioned way. Some of these are free, some are not. Why should you subscribe to a pay-to-access online newsletter, when so many of them are available for free? Well, for one thing - it just might be worth it.
An Old Saying That Is Still True: You Get What You Pay For! There are some distinct differences between free and paid online stock trading newsletters. To begin with, nothing is free. So if you, the reader, are not paying who is? The advertisers! Most free newsletters are full of advertising, which you may or may not want to read, takes up space and can be very annoying. Advertising is minimal or even absent in paid newsletters.
Secondly, you should consider the potential effects of advertising on the content of the newsletter. Free online newsletters have no obligation to journalistic integrity, and may "push" the stock of their advertising clients, even if better options are available. If you notice that the service you're using blurs the line between paid advertising and free advice, consider what it's costing you in terms of the potential profits that you may be missing through missed opportunity - opportunity that could have been yours for a low subscription fee.
Still think free is always better? There are other advantages to paid services as well. For example, the professionals tend to use the paid services, rather than the free newsletters, so when you subscribe, you're getting the same level of quality as the pros. Free services can be somewhat inconsistent when it comes to the quality of information, but the pay-to-access newsletters may aim for the level of quality that's needed by professional brokers, because if they don't, the brokers won't subscribe, and the service loses money. Even if you're not a pro, don't you think having that level of information available to you could be profitable?
Luckily, You're Not Just Stuck With One - A great thing about your subscription is that you could change your mind and cancel it at any time. You may decide to try another newsletter that suits your needs better. You may notice that some newsletters focus on the stock trading that you want to do more than the newsletter you currently subscribe to. In that case, it is perfectly logical to switch your subscription.
Are you using a software package, such as those that offer a web trading platform? If you like the program, find out if they also offer newsletters, tips and forecasts as an added benefit to their clients. This can give you information from a source you already like with minimal effort and expense.
An online stock trading newsletter will of no help or value to you if it does not cover the kind of trading you engage in. If you are a conservative trader, looking for a diversified package of investments, then a newsletter focusing on penny stocks will be of no use to you. And, of course, if penny stocks is your thing than don't spend money on an online stock trading newsletter that is centered on NASDAQ because penny stocks aren't part of the NASDAQ market.
Both Carl G. Robertts & Reginald T. Hobbss are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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