Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Want To Become Day Trader? Here's The Key To Making Money

By Sam Lockwood

Day trading is an excellent way to make good money, but if you've heard it's easy or a form of passive income, you've heard wrong. You need to put some work into it.

Day trading commodities and stocks is more like a highly lucrative job. You need a number of firmly ingrained habits to be successful at it.

The first thing you'll absolutely need is a good sense of time. The kind of person who's not good in the mornings or needs that morning jolt from coffee will only make themselves miserable trying day trading. That's because the best time to decide how you'll be playing the market today is right before opening bell. That's at nine in the morning in New York and six in the morning in California. If you're living in Hawaii or Alaska, it's five am. Of course, just being an early riser isn't enough. You'll also need to have a good internal clock and a solid scheduling system.

Habit number two that you'll need is having a good set of skills for quantitative thinking. You'll make or lose money in day trading just by operating on gut instinct. Making informed decisions, on the other hand, requires you to be able to look at numbers and understand them completely without even thinking about it. This means that numeracy and the ability to deal with numbers in your head is vital if you're going to tell whether something's a blip or a trend, and deal with it correctly.

Of course, that doesn't mean you have to be a trained mathematician. You can learn how to deal with numbers correctly, even it's never been your strong suit. Some numerical skills can almost become second nature once you get going.

Habit number three is maintaining good observational skills, being incredibly patient, and learning to forget. This can be pretty hard, since you have to keep yourself from feeling let down when you don't catch a stock at its top, or when you lose money on a short sale that never turns up. Don't get caught up in either your wins or your losses, or you'll lose focus and money.

Dedicated research is also a must. Day trading doesn't require you to devour accounting statements like long term investing usually does, but you do need to constantly be able to deal with the flow of data and make analyses. You also have to be proactive about shares that you're buying or selling, and make snap judgments that you act on fast. The only way you'll know these judgments are the right ones are through the right research. However, don't let this desire for good research paralyze you.

Remember that you don't actually have to analyze most of this data or do most of this research. That's because the best traders have access to plenty of tools, including a number of different data services and research tools.

If you're thinking about getting into day trading, you'll also need to build up a support network. That requires dealing with a broker, as well as finding investors who will help you apply leverage to the market. You have to understand that this is work, and that this kind of work requires intelligence, focus, and a strong will.

If you believe that you have all these skills, day trading offers an exciting and fascinating way to make a huge income. It's a job you can honestly consider fun, and if you have what it takes, it'll be pretty enriching, too.

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