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Day
Trading & Investing Basics
To
learn day trading, it would help if you first had a
lesson about the basics of investing. What do I mean
by "the basics." Things like, "What
is a stock and how does it work?",
"What is a 'ticker
symbol'?," "What
is the difference between the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) and the NASDAQ?," "What
are the concepts of 'margin' and 'commissions'?,"
"What does 'selling
short' mean?," etc. What is even more
important to a trader is to understand the meaning of
"bid and ask" and the different types of
orders that can be placed when you buy or sell an
investment. I briefly highlight these points below.
What
are the "bid and ask?"
If
you have ever typed the ticker symbol in any financial
website on the Internet to get the price quote for a
stock, you would have obtained something like this:
| Intel
Corporation (Ticker: INTC) |
| Last |
34.25 |
Change |
+1.25 |
| Bid |
34.24 |
Ask |
34.26 |
| Bid
Size |
1000 |
Ask
Size |
200 |
| Hi |
34.45 |
Low |
33.10 |
| Volume |
24,014,600 |
Last
Trade |
500 |
This
is what is called "Level I" information.
Level I gives you the best available prices for a
stock at a given time along with volume information
and some other details. In this example we are looking
at the stock of Intel Corporation, which has a
four-letter ticker symbol "INTC." What does
the rest of the information mean?
- Last
- the last transaction for the stock took place at
$34.25 a share.
- Change
- how much has the stock gone up or down from the
closing price (price at about 4:00 PM EST) of the
previous trading day. This means that the previous
day's closing price for Intel Corporation was
$33.00 ( = $34.25 - 1.25 = $33.00).
- Bid
- the best open order to buy the stock (also known
as the "best bid"). Someone is trying to
buy INTC at $34.25 a share or lower.
- Ask
- the best open order to sell the stock (also know
as the "best ask"). Someone is trying to
sell INTC at $34.26 a share or lower.
- Bid
Size - the amount of shares that investors are
trying to buy at the Bid price.
- Ask
Size - the amount of shares that investors are
trying to sell at the Ask price.
- Hi
- the transaction with the highest price of the
day. INTC has been as high as $34.45 per share.
- Low
- the transaction with the lowest price of the
day. INTC has been as low as $33.10 per share. So
the stock, currently at $34.25, is closer to the
upper part of its trading range than to the lower
part.
- Volume
- the total number of shares that have been bought
and sold (for every buyer there has to be a
seller) during the current trading day. Talk about
an active stock! In this example, INTC has traded
$822,500,050 worth of stock so far (24,014,000
shares x $34.25 per share = $822,500,050). Keep in
mind that INTC can easily trade twice this amount
of shares in one complete trading day.
- Last
Trade - the size of the last transaction in
the stock (somebody bought 500 shares of INTC
stock from someone else who sold 500 shares of
INTC stock).
This
might seem trivial to some of you, but every trader
should know this inside out without even having to
think about it. You have to recall this information
automatically without taking time to think.
Furthermore, you have to know how your order will
interact with the current Bid or Ask if you place an
order to buy or sell a stock, and this brings us to
the topic of "orders." How many different
types of orders exist and what are they good for? This
is information that you must know as a day trader (and
as an investor). Even though most of the information
on this page also applies to day trading currencies,
for a better understanding of currencies, you can go
to www.forex-day-trading.com.
Types
of orders to buy and sell stocks.
You
can place different types of orders when buying or
selling a stock. The main types are:
- Market
Order - an order to buy or sell a stock at the
best bid or ask WHEN the order gets to the market.
Unfortunately, this is the most widely used order
when it should really be the least used. Most
people place this order because they think that it
will get executed the fastest. This is not true.
Even though this order will guarantee you an
execution, it can be dangerous and can get you
into or out of a stock a lot later than everyone
else. Avoid using a market order as much as
possible.
- Limit
Order - an order to buy or sell a stock at a
specified price or better. This is the order that
should be most frequently used by traders of all
types. Unfortunately, it is not. The reason is
that a lot of people are afraid that this order
might not get filled (executed), so they place a
market order instead. Even though it is true that
a limit order might not get filled (since it does
not guarantee you an execution), once the trader
learns approximately at what price to place it he
will achieve an execution the great majority of
the times. The advantage of a limit order is that
once the order is executed, it will be at an
acceptable price to the trader. This outweighs the
slight disadvantage of not getting filled some of
the times, and often makes it possible to obtain
better prices than with a market order (and faster
executions).
- Stop
Order - this is an order that becomes a market
order when a specified price (stop price) is
reached. It is almost as if the stop order had an
alarm or activation feature that, once triggered,
sent a market order to the market. This order can
be used to limit the loss or protect the profit of
a trade. The buy stop order is placed above the
current price for the stock and the sell stop
order is placed below the current price of the
stock. In a direct-access RealTick system,
enhanced versions of the stop order can be placed.
This can be a very beneficial feature for a day
trader, especially one who is starting out and
needs to build discipline limiting his or her
losses.
If
you are not familiar with any of this information it
doesn't matter. Slowly you will begin to understand
all of the things you need to know to learn how to day
trade.
Day
Trading facts
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