Are you looking for day-trading secrets? 1. Use a good stock scanner like Trade Ideas or Finviz to hunt for momentum plays. 2. Filter by float and breaking news. 3. Map out support and resistance levels. 4. Look for stock chart breakouts. Pay close attention to bull flags and ascending triangles. 5. Use at least a 1:2, ideally 1:5 risk/reward ratio.
Day Trading Course
Table of Contents
Best Day Trading Secrets
Are there day-trading secrets that can revolutionize the way you trade? Probably not. Trading is hard work and emotional. Many people want to find a trading service that tells them when to get in and out of trades. Trade alerts are great if you know why you’re taking the trade. However, we have some good steps to follow as you day trade. You can join us in our trade room daily and watch us talk about what’s moving in real-time.
We even have our day trade watch list that we put out every day. Unless, of course, the market is so bad there aren’t any good setups. It’s important not to force trades when the market is indecisive. Day trading secrets won’t help you in an indecisive market.
Take our day trading course before implementing anything regarding day trading secrets.
1. Find the Right Stocks to Trade
You can have the best trading strategies in the world, but if your stocks don’t move or have low volume, you won’t make money consistently.
Or, you could be just starting out and completely overwhelmed by the thousands of stocks available to trade. I get it; I was there.
So, your job as a trader is to identify the stocks that will move; I call these Stocks in Play.
Characteristics of Stocks In Play
- High Relative Volume – (also keep an eye on vwap)
- Trading Independently of What Their Sector and the Overall Market are Doing
- Some News or Fundamental Catalyst Just Released
- Unusual Pre-Market Trading Activity
2. High Relative Volume
You don’t want to look for a high total volume. Instead, looking for stocks trading irregularly higher than normal would be best.
In simple terms, they have a very high, unusual trading volume. Stocks that trade millions of shares each day might not meet these criteria if that’s their normal.
Take Apple (AAPL), for example. If it traded 5 million shares today, does this mean you should trade it? No.
This is because 5 million might be APPL’s daily average. So, don’t trade it unless it has an unusually high relative volume.
Otherwise, the trading might be due to institutional traders and high-frequency trading computers.
COURSE | |||
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DESCRIPTION | Learn how to read penny stock charts, premarket preparation, target buy and sell zones, scan for stocks to trade, and get ready for live day trading action | Learn how to buy and sell options, assignment options, implement vertical spreads, and the most popular strategies, and prepare for live options trading | How to read futures charts, margin requirements, learn the COT report, indicators, and the most popular trading strategies, and prepare for live futures trading |
INCLUDED | Daily watch lists • Trade rooms • Trading scanners • Discord • Live streaming Day Trading > | Daily watch lists • Trade rooms • Options scanners • Discord • Live streaming Options > | Futures target levels • Trade rooms • Real time teaching • Discord • Live streaming Futures > |
3. Trading Independently of Sector and Market
One of the most important characteristics of stocks is trading independently of their sector and the overall market.
Every day, only a handful of stocks are being traded like these, and day traders should trade only those stocks.
4. News or Fundamental Catalyst Just Released
As a day trader, you want to capitalize on swift price moves. And nothing moves a price more swiftly than hot news or, in technical jargon, a fundamental catalyst.
In my mind, some examples of fundamental catalysts that will move a stock price are as follows:
- Earnings Reports – either missing or superseding earnings expectations
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- FDA News – i.e., approval of a drug to treat a disease
- Stock Splits/Buybacks/Debt Offerings
- News Major Contract Win/Loss
- Legal Action
- Restructuring/Layoffs
5. Risk Management
Stop worrying only about how you’ll enter a trade. The key is to know at all times when you’ll exit.
Because the most important thing is to limit portfolio risk, the trades will take care of themselves.
Risk management has many names. You’ll find it called money management, bet sizing, or even position sizing.
You want to live to trade another day. The rules are simple: don’t risk more than 2% of your account size. Take your account (whatever size) and multiply by 2 percent.
For example, a $100,000 account would risk 2 percent or $2,000 per trade. If you are wrong, it’s always better to bet a small amount initially on any trade.
Which can easily be greater than 50% of the time. However, you can reduce your risk -and subsequent return- by reducing the percentage, for example, to 1.5%.
Because it’s better to risk-taking many small losses than to risk missing one large profit.
6. Minding Your Business
You don’t get any profit from watching the news. However, you profit from buying and selling, not predicting what’ll happen tomorrow.
News from CNBC, Bloomberg, Stocktwits, and the list goes on and on will only serve to distract and overwhelm you. Stop watching TV!
Stop looking at financial news. Don’t lurk in a chat room waiting for the moderator to call out a trade.
What would be best is to study, find a strategy that works, and start keeping track of what the technical indicators are telling you. Are they telling you it’s the right time to enter a trade?
Or perhaps they’re telling you it’s time to exit. Follow your rules exactly.
7. Practice and Practice Some More
“Give me a dozen healthy infants and my specific world to bring them up in, and I’ll guarantee to take anyone at random and train him to become any type of specialist I might select – doctor, lawyer, artist, merchant, chef and yes, even beggar and thief, regardless of his talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors.” John B. Watson, an early twentieth-century American psychologist
Practice. Sure, it might sound cliche, but it’s the reality. To put it in perspective, many people see winners like Tiger Woods and make innumerable excuses about why he’s great, and they’re not.
“He started learning golf as a toddler.” “He is a natural athlete.” “He earned his titles when golf lacked top-notch competition.”
The Importance of Grit
Do you want to know the truth? Woods is great because he has the discipline of practice ingrained in him. To demonstrate, look at the tape of him on Johnny Carson when he was three years old.
Practice all the time. What’s more, Woods is famous for saying, “No matter how good you get, you can always get better, and that’s the exciting part.” In my honest opinion, that mentality is mission-critical for both golf and trading.
Medicine is yet another field where skills develop because of repetitive training. Research shows repeatedly that medical students are often clumsy in the beginning.
Even their first tries at performing such basic procedures as finding a vein to tap for blood work is challenging. But through consistent, focused, and repetitive work, they become competent doctors with long and successful careers.
Trading will not be glamorous, nor will practicing be. It’s boring, lonely and frustrating.
But the rewards are worth it if you put in the time. And time spent in a trading simulator is time well spent.
Stock Signals & Alerts
Killing Your Emotions
Don’t let emotions fluctuate with the ups and downs of your capital. Personal feelings can’t interfere.
If you see the opportunity because it meets all your criteria, you trade it. You have to take the same steps regardless and not break your rules.
Know each day what your plan is. Then, plan your trade and trade your plan. And sadly, traders, both new and seasoned, sometimes break their rules.
Instead of trading as they should today, based on their money now and their rules, they trade based on the money they once had. They are trying to recoup.
How much money you used to have doesn’t matter. It’s how much money you have now.
So, if you started with $100,000 but now have $90,000, you would have to make trading decisions based on what you have now.
So, with a 2 percent risk allocation, it’s 2 percent of $90,000, not 2 percent of $100,000. Follow your rules religiously to protect your money.
Don’t Play Fortune Teller
Don’t try to predict how long a trend will last, either up or down. It’s not possible.
If you build a system that gives you an entry and exit, tells you how much to bet along the way, and adjusts to your current capital and market volatility, you know when to get in and out.
In other words, you have a strategy to trade, know how it works, and follow through on it. Don’t stay in a trade because you feel the price will rise.
Final Thoughts: Day Trading Secrets
Day trading doesn’t have to be complicated. But that doesn’t mean the road to success is easy.
What is needed is persistence, patience, and consistency with the daily commitment to learn and improve. In other words, grit.
And once you commit to getting started, momentum carries you. Producing results builds positive momentum, and you’ll get ahead and progress much faster.
Bullish Bears is here to help pave the road to success for you. We don’t believe in shouting out trades in our trade room; we believe in supporting you in your journey.