day tradingsoftwareday traderstock day trading
Is not to hard to use? I am going to trade maybe 2 or three hours a day, with a couple times all day. This is not going to be my profession, so an easy to use system would be best. I am just trying to practice with not to big of a bankroll to test out my skills! Thanks.
Day trading


First, to day trade stocks, brokerages will require a minimum account size of at least $25,000. Also, it's a risky game — very few people succeed at it. Those that do have generally become highly skilled at longer-term trading (position trading over several weeks, months or years or "swing trading" over days or weeks) before attempting day trading. There is no software you can use to make your decisions — that is totally up to you. It requires a great deal of experience (I would say, many years) to become a successful day trader.
All answers appreciated! I am looking to take some money and try my hand at day trading. I also would appreciate any suggestions at what the best trading site is. Thanks in advance for any help.
Day trading


Trade first on a simulator to test your theories at Investopedia.com

When you start making "virtual" money, then you can risk your own.

http://simulator.investopedia.com/home.aspx

http://investopedia.com

http://investing.sitesled.com/

http://futures.tradingcharts.com/learning/

Blogs

http://winners-and-losers.com/

Training & classes

http://bettertrades.com

http://investedcentral.com

ETF news and analysis

http://ETF-World.Org/

Article: Trading is Timing

http://www.investopedia.com/articles/trading/06/TradingisTiming.asp

Stock Charts

Bigcharts.com

http://www.stockTA.com

http://www.stockcharts.com

http://www.incrediblecharts.com…

www.prophet.net
americanbulls.com

Books on Investing

"Which Is Better, Buy-and-Hold or Market Timing?"

"Do You Have What It Takes to Be a Market Timer

The Beginner's Bible in Technical Analysis is:
Edwards & McGee"Tech. Anal. Of Stock Trends"

Droke, ClifTechnical Analysis Simplified

Kahn, Michael N.Tech. Anal. Plain & Simple

Kamich, Bruce M.How Technical Analysis Works

Lefevre, EdwinReminiscences of a Stock Operator

Lofton, ToddGetting Started in Futures

Lowenstein, RogerBuffet (Warren)-The Making of a Capitalist

O'Neil, William J.How to Make Money in Stocks

Oz, TonyHow to Make Money From Wall Street

Rotella, Robert P.Elements of Successful Trading, The

Schwager, JackStock Market Wizards

In the U.S. Stock Market, how do partial fills and multiple orders count in getting flagged as a Pattern Day Trader?

Day trading is buying and selling the same security within the same trading day (though if you don't already know that, you shouldn't be answering this question).

Suppose I process a series of buys on a particular security in the morning. Then sell them all in the afternoon.

Buy – Buy – Buy – Sell

Does this count as one day trade or three? What if either the Buy or Sell orders were partial fills?

Thanks
Thank you very much StopSpending.

What if the buys were separate orders, but you execute a single sell for the total lot?

Day trading


My experience has been that a "trade" is considered to be the order ans all of its fills. In the attached link, the SEC makes it very clear that a pattern day-trader is supposed to be a real day-trader. Counting each fill would snare too many customers in the net.

From Rule 2520:
"The term "day[-]trading" means the purchasing and selling or the selling and purchasing of the same security on the same day in a margin account"

"The term "pattern day trader" means any customer who executes four or more day trades within five business days. However, if the number of day trades is 6% or less of total trades for the five business day period, the customer will not be considered a pattern day trader"

It's pretty clear to me that to "execute" a trade. I place an order and get fills. The order and the fills are a "trade". Now, if your two "buys" are based upon two separate orders, then the pattern you ask about would be two day trades.

Further info:
Interactiveborkers gives clear examples of day trades on their website. Another reason why I like that firm so much. Looks like your two buys and one sell example is just one day trade.

I am conducting a business project, social experiment.
I am playing CNBC's Million Dollar Portfolio Challenge.
I am just looking for quality advice to invest $1 million in the stock market & looking for clean & crisp advice.

Please do not send spam, or links to pay-for-service sites. I just don't have the time for that.
Please provide advice, your answer & maybe reasons behind your answer.
I'm seeking to select 20 stocks today, to either purchase & sell.

Day trading


Day trading is tricky, whether your doing it for real or as an exercise like you are doing here. The primary problem is that over very short periods of time, individual stocks as well as the stock market indexes can be extremely volatile. You might as well throw darts at a dart board marked out with all of the stock symbols because it pretty much is sheer luck over such a short time frame anyway.

I'm not familiar with CNBC's Million Dollar Portfolio Challenge, so I don't know what their investing time horizon is like for this task. Depending on how long that horizon is, I would probably make different sets of choices for your million dollars. Over a longer horizon, I would probably do some research and then pick 20 stocks, $50,000 each, and then let them sit there and do nothing for several months as that is, historically, the best way to get a return on investment. Too much "in and out" of the market would kill you on commission costs alone anyway.

I want to invest 1 lakh borrowed mony for day trading as well as delivery based trading . what are the taxes and how can i get tax benifits.i am not doing any other job or business. just completed my MBA
Day trading


Day trading is very risky and you should only try that with extra income that you can live without. Since you are asking this question I know you are not qualified to trade at that level. Most brokers will want you to have at least $25,000.00 deposited in your account before you can Daytrade so you need to be aware of that. The stock market can be very lucrative but you must know what you are doing.
Day trading


You might want to take a look at http://www.top10traders.com – this is a free site that lets you create a portfolio of stocks with $100,000 in "play" money. Each day the site ranks the best performing portfolios, so you can see how your picks perform compared to other investors. You can read posts on investing from the best traders, as well as share your own investing ideas. There is a charting feature, so you can see how your portfolio performs compared to the S&P 500. Also, you can create your own "group" so that you can see how you are doing compared to your friends.

Here are this month's best traders:

http://www.top10traders.com/Top10Standings.aspx

Hope this helps.

I'm looking for the reason or logic that is behind recent trading activity I'm witnessing. XXX, trades as a OTC penny stock. I have shares that I bought through my normal brokerage account, just as anyone can. XXX is trading at massively high trading volumes now for months, with little to no change in share price. Average daily volume 333,281,908 shares. Several days with well over a billion shares traded. XXX's web site states that there are 10 bil shares outstanding. One last fact, the stock price has plummeted over these months. At .0001 per share during the massive volume period. My question is: How, with only 10 billion shares outstanding, can XXX be so actively traded at this volume and why would XXX sit at the same price and trade billions of shares, when all press and reports about the company are positive?

My take is that someone is deliberately swapping shares, huge chunks at a time, at ridiculously low prices to keep the stock price down? Why go to the expense?

Day trading


>>How, with only 10 billion shares outstanding, can XXX be so actively traded at this volume and why would XXX sit at the same price and trade billions of shares, when all press and reports about the company are positive?

The market is at a price consensus or is in a consolidation phase. The bulls and bears are in consensus; no one is more powerful than the other.

You will also find that penny stocks are usually less volatile than bigger value stocks.

>>My take is that someone is deliberately swapping shares, huge chunks at a time, at ridiculously low prices to keep the stock price down? Why go to the expense?

No I doubt anyone would be doing that deliberately. There is no point to such exercise – waste of time and money.

Maybe people who bought earlier at a cheaper price are taking profits and people who are hearing the news are buying in.

Good Luck!

Presently I am getting the graphs for India stocks on Yahoo which are 20 minutes late and therefore are not of much use for day trading. NSE & BSE are too slow and are therefore worthless.
Day trading


Take a look at marketwatch.com. I was looking at one earlier today and while I was making notes, the price kept changing. It may not be "realtime" but it was surprisingly close just from that example. I don't know if they cover your exchanges, but some of your stuff is traded elsewhere too.
I read an article before but couldnt remember the detail. can someone explain to me what is it? I only knew that if the stocks drop so many points (like today) during certain time of the trading day, the stock markets would put into halt. something like that.
Day trading


This site will have all the information you need…
I just want to hear from serious investors what they think about day trading. I think that it is a bad idea? What are your thoughts? No I don't want to visit any websites to make money for all of the bots that seem to rule this section.
I do think it is a bad idea, but I was wondering what other people thought.
Day trading


It is a good way to make a small fortune — if you start with a large one.