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| Investors: Those who expect minimum 30-40% appreciation and are willing to hold between two months to a few years. They enter only long positions and usually select a scrip based on fundamental analysis. Medium-long term investors can utilise technical analysis to time their entry and profit booking better. |
| | Day traders: Day traders enter long/short trades to square up the same day. They usually base decisions on technicals, information or at times, gut feel. |
| | Short-term traders: Short-term traders expect 5-20% returns within 2 days to 3 weeks. They enter long as well as short positions. These include: |
| 1. | Position trading, where one either buys a stock and holds for the required appreciation, or sells from an existing long (or borrowed) position to cover at a lower level. |
| 2. | Futures & options trading |
| It provides an opportunity to make substantial profits in a short period and ensures continuous rotation of capital. |
| | As against long-term investment, short-term trading has limited downside because of strict stoplosses. |
| Short-term trading has less demand on the traders time, while day trading requires full-time attention at the terminal. Hence, even those who pursue other professions can do short-term trading. |
| | One can leverage on margin in case of short-term trading in futures. |
| Short-term trading in options requires smaller investment and has limited risk. |
| | The first principle is to do few trades. At any point, one should not have more than 6 trades outstanding. A good number is 3-5. |
| Equal capital allocation: Divide your short term trading capital equally into each trade. Ideally if one has Rs 1 lac of capital, one should put around Rs 20,000 in each trade. |
| | Clear Targets and profit booking: While entering a trade, one should be clear about the target price he expects to achieve. Once the target is reached, profits should be booked promptly. Here, some traders often fall to the greed-syndrome and hold on for more profits. This, more often than not, leads to losses in the long run. |
| Strict stoplosses: No strategy, however good, can ensure 100% success. A strategy that yields above 65% success rate is reasonably good. |
| Dont "buy time": Often traders mix up various types of trading. For example, a trader entering a day trade carries his position overnight if the trade turns against him. Or, a short-term trader does not exit at a stoploss and converts it to a long-term investment. He hopes some day it will fetch him profit. These traders are just "buying time". Unfortunately, this works as rarely as you would find refrigerator in an igloo. Stick to your trading style and importantly; dont convert trades from one type to another. |
| | Track your performance: A trader should monitor performance on every trade, as well as, across all trades. Remember, if trading is your business, run it like a business. Rigorously perform the forecasting, planning and monitoring that goes into it. |