day tradingsoftwareday traderstock day trading
I need over 10k to day trade options and stocks and need extra capital to make more money, will a bank loan me money for this purpose?
Day trading


No. A bank will not, as you need something to legal tie the funds too…even with a signature loan, you need to explain the reason for the loan (this is to prevent money laundering). Your only option in this case is a Margin Account through your broker. But since you trade options, you would already have a margin account, which means you know you do need to maintain equity in the account.
There is an alternative. BUT, I wouldn't recommend it.
You could engage in a Carry Trade. Again!! I do not recommend you do this for Day-Trading options or stocks!
You short a currency (the JPY is pretty popular). Just like shorting a stock, you get a credit. Since Forex is not regulated by the same Margin Rules as Equities, you can get 50K for a simply $500 account. With that credit, rather than buying Bonds with a higher interest rate than the rate of the shorted currency (Fed rate is 4.25, so you could get a bond around that rate, which JPY rate is .5%..you profit from the difference) you put that money into your options account. You need to be careful that you leave some room in your Forex account, as you do not want a Margin Call on this. And you need to make sure you monitor the currency market to make sure that the JPY's flat…although if it is dropping, you have the added bonus of making money there too.

I am not suggesting you do this, but just saying that there are possibilities out there. Just don't use this one, as it you need to be aware of what you are doing.

I am a new Trader in Indian stock market and i want to know that is there any charges for intraday trading.. and how can we do intraday trading when we got our DEMAT shares after two days from the day of trading…??
Day trading


Intraday trading is one in which u r buying and selling those shares, dat very day itself, here only your profit or loss will get added in the margin. here u r not talking delivery of shares.

Brokerage(Standard)0.1% of volume
Service tax12.24% of total brokerage
STT 0.025% of the total vol traded-only for sell
Stamp duty0.002% of the total vol
Turnover tax0.0035% of the total vol

I was just about to get into day trading but I was going to start off with $5000 and $2500 in margin but i just red the margin/day trading policy and I believe it said that if I make more than 4 full trades in a week, then they will suspend my account untill I have a $25000 minimum. is this true?
Day trading


I doubt they would do that, but ask them to find out for sure.

The thing is if you are trying to day-trade with $2,500, the commissions are going to eat up your entire investment. It will probably cost you $25 to buy and sell. The less money you put in, the higher your break-even point becomes. I never put less than $3,000 into a single stock or you just can't make any money off of it.

You also picked a terrible time to start trading my friend. Wait until the recession is over. Things are going to drop at least another 15% in the coming weeks. Your "day trading" will become "month trading" while you sit and wait for your stocks to come out of their loss positions.

I just opened an account with ameritrade and was caught off guard with this whole unsettled funds and regulation T . so I started searching and found out that margin account dont have this problem. I dont want to trade on margin because I do not want to pay any interest. will I be paying interest if I buy and sell stocks with unsettled funds in a margin acount before the 3 day settlement period? I hope thats not too confusing thanks alot.
heres what I want to do , let say I buy and sell stock xyz on one day can I buy and sell stock abc and/or xyz the next day and then wait for both to be settled and not be charged interest?
Day trading


When you sell a stock the proceeds from the sale will be "unsettled" for 3 market days (T+3). If you have a Margin account you should be able to buy with borrowed funds. What you have to understand is that your buy with borrowed funds will not settle for 3 market days either (and shouldn't be charged interest) and therefore once both the sale, and margin buy settle you will basically have avoided using margin and paying any interest. You should double check with Ameritrade as I know different companies have different margin regulations.
I wish I could do one that did both stocks and commodities and futures, but I'll be happy with stocks. I want to place my 40k in mutual funds into day trading (don't worry, I have actual training, classes, risks, know I'm likely to lose, etc.) but I still want to pick one. I want an online platform that's fast, gets information quickly, executes cheap trades, and is generally reliable and easy to read.

Anyone have experience with good ones?

Day trading


Go read some online articles that compare the main platforms. Just do an online search for "online brokerage comparisons" or something like that. I reccommend Scottrade as the trades are about as cheap as you will get. The downside is their margin rates are above average and I've seen mixed reports on their speed of filling trades. Still for me, they are perfect (but maybe not for you).

Etrade is supposed to allow you to trade on 4 or 5 stock marktes around the world – a huge advantage for a really smart investor or one that wants to focus on international stocks, but useless to most smaller investors (or most that want to focus on mutual funds – like you, maybe).

There are some other good ones. You'll find that OptionExpress is very good (never used this one myself, but they are well rated). More expensive that scottrade but margin rates are lower and maybe they are faster at filling trades.

Anyhow, thats my take on 3 of them but there are many more out there. Of course only used ones that are sipc insured, and again – I'd advise searching for more specifics on this via an online search. FYI, I think kiplingers had an areticle about this about 1-2 years ago. good article but alot can change in 2 years (and I'm not positive it was Kiplingers)

Best luck.

Hi,

plss tell me the full procedure to do intraday trading on icicidirect.com specially i do not want to do the short selling process in which we sell first and then buy later i want to do the intraday' buying in the morning and then selling at the end of the day process becoz i am not comfortable with the short selling process
thx

Day trading


Intraday trading is done in a simialar manner as u do normal trading.
if u square off the positions within the same day, then the system automatically treats it as an intraday trade.

if u want to trade for a higher amount than what u actually have in ur bank a/c, then u have to go in for margin trading. this will be available for only intraday trades. however it will be allowed only on selected stocks. Also it is enabled only after a few mins. of the opening of the market. All the orders here will be squared off at around 3.00 pm itself in the afternoon.

Ie, forex, CFD's, indices etc? If you are, can you shed some light on how to start and how much capital you started with?
Day trading


Well, fx cfds are great and hedge funds use them to make millions.. but day trading? the answer above said it.. a losing game.

i think sometime ago i came across a emperical studied that proved day-traders lose everything in the long-run.

some of the best traders dont over-trade. they don't commit without any goal.

investment is key.

can potentially make lot of money from trading cfds from making 10 trades a year – holding them for sometime -provided u have the margin.. than from day-trading. the money u make today ull lose tomorrow.

If you are, how much is the minimum should I use? What books did you read? What did you do? Are there any mentors I can learn from? I want to take care of my family, especially my parents who are retired.
Day trading


This can work – it depends on how much attention you're willing to devote to it. I have found that any time I take my attention off of the market for a few hours or a few days, I'm punished by an opportunistic turn that I missed. This is not a maybe – it will happen if you're not at your desk. And when I focus 9:15 through 4:15, I perform, with a couple hours homework a night.

The books recommended by others here are great. It's hard to advise you further not knowing how much you do/don't know about the market. The paper trading practice sites are an essential. Try those out in earnest and you'll save yourself from unnecessary mistakes later when errors cost real money.

I find that it's important to do a few things:

1. Chart the S&P for uptrends and downtrends – when you see an established trend the market will tend to move that way, and stay within the down slope and up slope "channel" in its daily activity for multiple days. This gives you added confidence as to when to "buy", when to "add to" your position, and when to cash out. When a stock busts out up or down that can be the opportunity to get in or out (depending on direction) of a given index, ETF, or stock. This will also help you stabilize your stock monitoring because you will focus on the stocks at present which are near "support (floor)" or ceiling (resistance)" positions. To help me do this, I've found it is incredibly valuable to have a second computer screen (I use two PCs because I'm mobile when I want to be) with several key screens of data/chart references.

One screen has no more than 6 stocks I'm watching that day, with charts on each screen.

One screen has all major sectors' charts on it – by sector fund (USO, OIH, etc.)

One screen has 52 week uptrending stocks I'm monitoring for pullbacks

Other screens are categoric (e.g., AG companies)

2. Using other resources such as the 52 week high stocks (WSJ, YahooFinance, Google Finance, etc.), and Top 100 (IBD.com) are also opportunities to check for trends, and determine whether to jump on this momentum during a given day, or to wait for a pullback and get in before a multi-day upswing for a multi-day "swing" trade. If you put in the time, you will identify pending breakouts.

3. Listen to Fast Money to pick up on hot trends and expert interviews that can indicate stocks to watch since they have such a wide audience.

4. Keep track of volume levels and beware of low volume days.

5. Track sector movement and rotations. Institutional buyers will dictate what will move, whether it "makes sense" to you or not.

6. Listen to Art Cashen (sp?) – every morning about 9:15 AM EST before the market opens. His insights are usually good indicators to align with or watch for. Good pulse on the market.

7. Know that a margin account can be traded every day with no interest if you don't carry it over night. Non-margin accounts will have a 3 day carry cycle until you can reinvest the funds.

Best wishes for success. Cramer can be a goof on some topics, but knowing what he's tracking can also give you one or two key stocks to watch for the next day if conditions align to support those stocks. His trading rules lists are very good.

Day trading


Here are a few basics:
- Concentrate on a few, liquid and volatile stocks only.
- Buy or sell intra day trends with at least 3:1 reward-risk ratios.
- Use mental stops placed under the last minimum (above the last maximum, when shorting) and stick to them.
- Use a decent money management scheme, write down the rules and stick to them.
- Develop a system, trade it on paper only for some time, before risking money.

Here are some more, that I found useful too:
- Don't trade the first and last half hour.
- Stop trading on a given day when you have reached a set target amount or when you have lost a fixed amount.
- No more than two ongoing trades at one time.
- Take breaks, it's a stressful activity

Decreased? (If someone is trying to do day trades with $40,000 or less, then they will not be able to do too many trades since their money will be locked up during the settlement time. Is there a rule that lets day traders overcome this hurdle?)
Day trading


Yes, it's called a margin account. And I don't know of any brokers that will allow you to day trade outside of one. With a margin account, you buy stocks with money you borrow from the broker (you pay interest on open margins). This way your money isn't tied up during trade settlement. Of course, you have to keep cash or stock in your account as collateral against the margin loan.