Day Trading For Dummies (For Dummies (Business & Personal Finance))

Day Trading For Dummies (For Dummies (Business & Personal Finance)) Day trading is undoubtedly the most exciting way to make money from home. It’s also the riskiest. Before you begin, you need three things: patience, nerves of steel, and a well-thumbed copy of Day Trading For Dummies—the low-risk way to find out whether day trading is for you.

This plain-English guide shows you how day trading works, identifies its all-too-numerous pitfalls, and get you started with an action plan. From classic and renegade strategies to the nitty-gritty of daily trading practices, it gives you the knowledge and confidence you’ll need to keep a cool head, manage risk, and make decisions instantly as you buy and sell your positions. Learn how to:

  • Set up your accounts and your office
  • Connect with research and trading services
  • Plan and research trades carefully and thoroughly
  • Comply with regulations issues and tax requirements
  • Leverage limited capital
  • Cope with the stress quick-action trading
  • Sell short to profit from price drops
  • Evaluate your day-trading performance
  • Use technical and fundamental analysis
  • Find entry and exit points
  • Use short-term trading to establish a long-term portfolio

You’ll also find Top-Ten Lists of good reasons to go into day trading, or run from it in terror, as well as lists of the most common (and expensive) mistakes day traders make. Read Day Trading For Dummies and get the tips, guidance, and solid foundation you need to succeed in this thrilling, lucrative and rewarding career.
Customer Review: Not For Dummies —
I have a Mensa IQ – have traded equities for 15 years and found this book to be complex and difficult to read. It presumes a lot of things that puts this well outside the title ” For Dummies.” “Daytrading for Intermediate to Advanced Traders” would be more honest.
If you are looking for simple understanding of the day trading concept, look elsewhere. If you want an advanced text, this is probably a minimally fair choice.
Customer Review: More than for just Dummies
I received this book as a gift and, at first, I was skeptical. I spent 20 years working for investment banks starting as a runner on the floor and retiring as the head of a trading desk. “What,” I asked, “does this book have to teach me?”

Ah, beware of hubris! I was pleasantly surprised at what I learned. The book has a good introduction to how to obtain the sorts of information that a real day trader will need, but is best on the emotional. Emotions are almost always overlooked. I’ve seen lots of bright people rise to a certain point on a trading desk and then just implode because they couldn’t handle the stress. And these were people working with other’s money. It is even worse when it’s your own dough on the line. The guy who practices day trading until he has his system all ready and then blows out a month after going live is very common.

Early in my career I started my own firm. This was before day trading was even technically possible and the firm was in the options pits. I got on the emotional roller coaster: on good days it was “Come on Honey, its steak dinner time!” On bad days I tried to save money by rationing toothpaste. It all ended in tears.

This is all by way of stressing the role emotions play in successfully trading the market. This book discusses strategies actually employed by some of the best traders on Wall Street and the book is worth looking into for that alone.

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