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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Overview of a Day Trader's Responsibility

By Mara Hernandez-Capili

A day trader is one who practices day trading. The definition of day trading implies that it is the act of rapidly selling or buying of stocks in one whole trading day. Day trading is a high risk investment with the hopes of gaining high profits over the seconds or minutes the trader owns a specific share before selling it. Day trading is being favored by online traders or casual traders (at home traders) because it is quick and challenging.

There are actually two types of a day trader one is the Institutional day trader and the other, the retail day trader. The Institutional day trader is one who trades for a financial institution. He is more like an employee of that company. He also makes use of sophisticated computers and trading software and peripherals in order to manage his work more effectively.

A Retail day trader is one who trades for his own account and shares. He uses his own money for trading that is why he is not answerable to anyone lest his activity suffered losses. The good thing about retail day traders is that they get to keep the profit by themselves. Retail day traders, since they are working for themselves can come to work in sneakers- or for some in pajamas, if he is a casual trader at home.

A a retail day trader who has been in the business for 10 years says that there are hardships that retail day traders face (along with the exhilaration of amassing great profits). Day traders tend to get addicted to the game of day trading because of its unpredictable nature. Day traders are also exposed to health related problems due to the longer hours of typing and staring at the computer screen for market rises.

A retail day trader is like an ideal job for everyone because you get to watch your finances grow without you working and just staying at home. It is very favorable for people who would want to save on transportation costs on working and for those who would just want to stay at home watching their money grow. - 23208

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The Essentials of technical Analysis: Part II

By Jack Haddad

Charting:

The time frame used for forming a chart depends on the compression of the data: intraday, daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, or annual data. Traders usually concentrate on charts made up of daily and intraday data to forecast shorterm price movements.

The shorter the time frame and the less compressed data is, the more detail that is available. While long on detail, short term charts can be volatile and contain a lot of noise. Large sudden price movements, wide high-low ranges and price gaps can effect volatility, which can distort the overall picture. Long term charts care good for analyzing the large picture to get a broad perspective of the historical price action. Once the general picture is analyzed, a daily chart can be used to zoom in on the last few months. Four of the most popular methods of displaying price data are by the following charts: line bar, candlestick, and point & figure. The line chart is one of the simplest charts. It is formed by plotting one price point, usually the close. For that matter, I don't favor them because I personally consider the open, low, and high to be as important as the close in technical analysis. However, at times, only closing data are available for certain indices, thinly traded stocks and intraday prices. Bar charts are perhaps the most popular charting method. The high, low, and close are required to form the price plot for each period of a bar chart. The high and low are represented by the top and bottom of the vertical bar and the close is the short horizontal line crossing the vertical bar. On a daily chart, each bar represents the high, low, and close for a particular day. Weekly charts would have a bar for each week based on Friday's close and the high and low for that week. Bar charts can be effective for displaying a large amount of data.

Using candlesticks, 200 data points can take up a lot of room and look cluttered. Line charts show less clutter, but do not offer as much detail (no high-low range). The individual bars that make up the bar chart are relatively skinny, which allows users the ability to fit more bars before the chart gets cluttered. If you're not interested in the opening price, bar charts are an ideal method for analyzing the close relative to the high and low. In addition, bar charts that include the open will tend to get cluttered quicker. If you're interested in the opening price, candlestick charts probably offer a better alternative. The beauty of Point & Figure charts is their simplicity. Little or no price movement is deemed irrelevant and therefore not duplicated on the chart. Only price movements that exceed specified levels are recorded. This focus on price movement makes it easier to identify support and resistance levels, bullish breakouts and bearish breakdowns. Contrary to this methodology, Point & Figure charts are based solely on price movement and do not take time into consideration. The topic on candlestick charting is broad and beyond the scope of this article. This method of charting originated in Japan over 300 years ago, and have become quite popular in recent years. For a candlestick chart, the open, high, low, and close are all required. A daily candlestick is based on the open price, the intraday high and low, and the close. A weekly candlestick is based on Monday's open, the weekly high-low range, and Friday's close.

Trendlines:

Trendlines are an important tool in technical analysis for both trend identification and confirmation. The general rule in technical analysis is that it takes two points to draw a trendline and the third point confirms the validity. An up trendline is formed by connecting two of more low points. The second low must be higher than the first for the line to have a positive slope.

Up trendlines act as support and indicate that net-demand (demand less supply) is increasing even as the price rises. A downtrend is formed by connecting two or more high points. The second high must be lower than the first for the line to have a negative slope. Down trendlines act as a resistance and indicate that net-supply is increasing even as the price declines. - 23208

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Finance Part 2: Investments That Work

By Mara Hernandez-Capili

We are all dreaming of that special day when we can sit back and relax at a fabulous island while sipping a cold pia colada, not worrying about missing work (because you dont work!) and just thinking of the countless money that is earning itself in your bank account. Sounds fantastic right? How would you feel if I tell you that this kind of lifestyle is within your reach, you just have to exercise on your financial intelligence to have it?

Financial freedom is a dream most of us have. It may be hard to reach it but that is the reason why there are seminars and financial classes that will equip one on steps and different strategies towards financial intelligence. It is important to research and know more about the right vehicles that you think can work for you. This article will show you the different types of investment that are guaranteed to work.

First tip is to invest through stock or shares. Stocks are a chunk from a publicly listed company which you can buy and can make you a part-owner of that company. Stocks however pose some risks that an investor needs to review before selecting his options. Stock trading also has risks involved that are why a lot of people think twice before investing in stocks. Your capital may increase if the company starts to enjoy higher profits and has a danger of having no returns if the company experience losses.

Second is to invest in real estate. Buying a piece of real estate and having it rented is a very favorable investment. It can pump you with money month after month. It is a classic example of having your money work for you. A word of advice: start building your asset column first by buying assets first before buying liabilities. Assets are those who put money in your pocket while liabilities are those that take away money from your pocket.

Learn more on how to invest on stocks by reading other related articles as this is practically an easy and fun thing to do. It means having more time to focus on your other investments while watching your money grow. - 23208

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Know How To Place Stop Losses?

By Hass67

The intra day forex market is full of noise that it becomes difficult for new traders to understand where to put the stop loss. There is so much noise in the forex markets in the short run that prices tend to jump 10-20 pips for no apparent reason.

The noise in the intraday market keeps on frustrating new day traders. They constantly find their stop losses being tripped even when the rates are going in the anticipated direction.

A static 10-20 pip stop loss is an arbitrary choice many traders make. Many new traders also use Trailing Stop Loss. Place your trailing stop loss too close and you will find your stop hit too early. Place it too far and you will have to forgo potential profits if the price retraces.

The actual reality is this that many professional forex traders do use stop loss but mostly place it on their computers making it invisible from their brokers. A better method to place a stop loss is by using a dynamic level that changes as the market rate changes.

Stop hunting is something the brokers are continuously doing. If a broker finds many stop losses at a particular price level on his price feed; he can easily trip them using a momentary blip in the price. You cant even complain. The momentary spike happened due to a sudden large transaction in the market.

However, many professional forex traders only use a stop loss in their mind. They continuously keep on updating it until they get the desired outcome. But you will need a lot of experience trading the forex markets to do this.

Dynamic stop losses can be easily placed using Moving Averages, Bollinger Bands, SARs etc. Using a dynamic stop loss is a good way to manage your risk while letting the currency markets do what it wants.

With more experience, you will learn that placing fixed stop losses actually harms more. Rather than helping, using a fixed stop loss can hurt you more emotionally, psychologically and profit wise.

Never ever trade, just before a major economic news release. Dont place your stop loss close to or at round numbers and at times of thin liquidity in the markets.

It is important for you to know that brokers constantly use stop hunting to take out your positions using noise in the market as an excuse. Learn how to beat the markets and the brokers. - 23208

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Capped Bust Silver Quarter - Scarce Quarter Fetches Premium Price

By Christina Goldman

The Capped Bust Silver Quarter counts among the rarest coins ever minted in the United States. These silver quarter coins were first minted in 1815 and were the immediate successors of the equally rare draped bust silver quarters which started minting in 1796. These two silver quarter varieties were minted by the then fledgling US government to replace the Spanish two-reales coin circulating in the Americas.

The Capped Bust Silver Quarter carried the same design as the other coins, like the half dollar, minted during that time. Production of these quarters went on until 1838, and these coins together with the draped bust quarter, have been named by numismatists as the "Early Quarters" commanding premium prices among coin collectors.

Other key years to look out for when scouting for the Early Quarters are 1823, 1804 and 1796. Notably from 1804 onwards, the reverse side of the Early Quarters sported a bigger, "heraldic" eagle, suggestive of strength and power that collectors and numismatists appreciate over coins of earlier vintage which had smaller eagle designs.

It is a sound advice that before buying a Capped Bust Silver Quarter or any of the Early Quarters, the buyer must have an assurance that these items have certification of authenticity from reputable numismatist groups or associations like the ANACS, NGC, PCGS and ICG. Another is to deal only with reputable dealers.

A useful website for reference on the capped bust silver quarter can be found in the net. This site carries a legitimate eBay auction listing of Early Quarters and their key dates. Through this listing, a prospective buyer could check the trend of the pricing, and compare various price levels within years, comparative data that are useful to the serious collector or dedicated numismatist. - 23208

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