day tradingsoftwareday traderstock day trading
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.
I am new to options trading. I would like to know how to understand that we are in profit? i mean like I have purchased a lot of call option at 100 rs per share and strike price is 105 and in a day or intraday it reaches to 106 then can I sell it at 106 price? and what will happen if it comes down to 100 or 99 again ,still I have achieved strike price or not. I mean if stock price goes up to 106 and comes down to 99 can i say i have achieved strike price or I should sell it when it is at 106? Pl explain and help. thanks '
Day trading


You question is confusing because it is often unclear if you are talking about the price of the option or the price of the underlying stock. Here is what I think you meant to say:

Question: "Assume I purchased call options with a strike price of 105 rs when a stock was at 100 rs per share. If the stock goes to 106 rs can I sell the option at that time?"

Answer: Yes. You can sell the option any time prior to expiration. It does not matter if the stock is (or ever has been) above the strike price.

Question: "It the stock goes up to 106 then comes back down to 99 can I say it reached the strike price?"

Answer: Yes, it reached the strike price, but that makes no difference whatsoever. The price of the option depends upon several factors, one of which is the current price of the stock. Any previous price at which the stock traded is not a factor.

Question: "Should I have sold the option when the stock was at 106 rs?"

Answer: You would get more money by selling the option when the stock was at the higher price, but at the time the stock was at 106 rs you had no way of knowing if the stock would keep going up or if it would go down. Consequently, when the stock was at 106 rs you had no way of knowing that it would be better to sell it at that time.

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From your question I strongly encourage you to learn more about options trading before investing any real money in options.

Day trading


If you have a margin account, when you buy a stock your cash is used first. You only use margin (or borrowing money) when you buy more stock than your money will pay for.

If you do buy on margin (or borrowed money) there are only two ways to change it. Deposit more cash to cover the purchase. Or sell securities which will increase your cash position.

The above is for the US.

And I am going to do the day trade terminology to get some little money in a daily basis.
Any ideas or experiences to share with me? Please don't be over exaggerated in none of positive or negative ways cause I know that it can be a dangerous game.
Thanks a lot :)
Day trading


Based upon your diction I would suggest you start with some research. Try http://www.marktetstock.net for starters.
For example, how much are prices of stocks affected by institutions (e.g. funds) and how much by small personal traders. If they recommend a stock in a financial magazine (e.g., Kiplinger), will it affect its price significantly – individual traders wanting to buy it? How big volumes are "day traders" – 10%, 20% or 0.2%?
Day trading


Goldberg and Lupercio, two analysts of the online trading industry, estimated that about 40% of all trading volume comes from a group of 50,000 "semi-professional" traders who use the major online brokerage firms. The analysis was for the year 2003.

So a good guess would be 40%.

I WANT TO START A DAY TRADING WITH A $50,000.00
CAPITAL ON A MARGIN ACCOUNT. ANY GOOD ADVISE
ABOUT WHAT SHOULD I KNOW.
Day trading


You better know what you're doing and have been doing for a while. and thay you understand the maket and the rules governing it.

Here are four rules you must have, if you don't you will loose money
1 – A written sound trading/investment plan with rules that will not only help you but more importantly protect you, mostly from yourself.
2 – Sufficient trading/investment capital. Use your own money, there’s no need to go into debt so that you trade/invest.
3 – A written money management program in place. Remember never invest 100% of your capital into any one security and never have 100% of your capital invested.
4 – A full and complete understanding of the rules & regulations of the industry.

Here are some of the rules that I follow, in additiona to the four cardinal rules above.
Never buy or sell based on anyone's, including your own, market predictions.
Stick with up-trending stocks.
Never buy stocks in danger of filing for or actually in bankruptcy.
Never average down.
Always sell when management cuts sales or earnings forecasts.
Only buy stocks with real sales and real earnings.
Always diversify between industries.
Don't buy stocks just because they've gone up.
Never sell a stock because an analyst proclaims it is overvalued.
Always look for companies with new ideas, new styles or new products.
Orders after an execution – a “stop loss”
No security is to be purchased at a price that is below the 50-day moving average price.

Good luck, based on your question, you're going to need it

Day trading


DIY?

Online trading has lowered commissions to the point where they are no longer the primary consideration. Ditto for good execution, if indeed they are Direct Access. If you decide later to trade commodities, options, futures, or currencies, TerraNova may be the only one that you can trade everything, real time, online, direct access. A lot of online brokerages claim to give you direct access, but if they take more than a second to execute your trade, it aint direct.

What you probably should be concentrating on is the best trading software or trading platform. But even then, everyone's criteria are different.

Find the articles online that have evaluated and compared online brokerages. I found a good one online in Barron's, but you'll find others in the trading magazines. Active Trader, Futures Mag, etc.

This is worth putting a little time and effort into, because it's a pain to switch, so once you choose, you're kinda stuck with it.

Townsend Electronics, the Parent company of TerraNova, is the one that digitized and electronified the Nasdaq. They are technological industry leaders and have a powerful and well built trading system.

I use RealTick at TerraNovaOnline, but it costs $275/mo. I think the Investor package is free to use, and just uses one screen.

What you should try is a free trial of their Investor platform, which is free. Their rates are good also, but of course, it depends on how often you trade. It will take you months to learn all the bells and whistles of what this program can do.

The other top-of-the line program is TradeStation, but it costs big bucks to join and operate. Some people consider it the Cadillac of trading and technical analysis.

TerraNova is the home of the Day Trader, so they think nothing of you making several hundred trades a day. You don't have to do that, but it's okay here if you do.

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!

I don't know much about retail accounts, like ameritrade or scottrade. If you have a retail account as such, and want to swing trade, can you short stocks, like you can as a day trader?
Day trading


Yes as long as you have a margin account…. but the "I don't know much about retail accounts" tells me you don't need to be on the short side of the market. There are other requirements to short and it varies broker to broker.