16 year old new to trading

That’s a very good age to accept something new and to perceive. It’s very important, not all the people can accept and understand the information about market and new technologies.
 
I would advice; spend a few more years in regular studies. You can trade all your life but formal education may not be easy to get afterwards.
 
I recommend you listen to Kenny Rogers "The Gambler" This is the best advice you can when trading. Once you understand those basic concepts you will ahead of the game.

" you have to know when to hold them and when to fold them."
that's all there is to trading.
 
Hello everyone! I'm new to the forums and I am absolutely in love with stocks. I opened a custodial account with my mom on ETrade and since then I have been obsessing with checking the prices. So far I have 25 apple shares which I made $100 on but that was just luck. I have a few K to spend on other stocks but not sure on what yet. I plan on going to college for this so I figured I minds well get a head start. My dream job would be working at a big bank in NYC. My question is where can I learn how to start trading now? Is there a particular website or should I just learn by experience? Are these forums good for helping each other? Just wanted to introduce myself and thank everyone for their help!
The sooner you learn that Wall Street, which I use as a collective term for all markets and "security" and forex trading world wide, is a cesspool of corruption. The sooner you learn that, the better off you will be. And once you learn to pay no attention to brokers recommendations or the media, and trust only your own common sense and judgement, the sooner you can begin to make money in the markets. Every time, with no known exceptions in the history of the universe, someone suggests to you that you should do this or that with your money, pay no attention. They want you to do something that will benefit them and harm you. When you are ready for it, read Soros. Everything he has written that you can get your hands on. He is the only one you should trust.
 
days of "gunslingers" like Paul Tudor and Soros are over. sadlyall math algo's now..

lawrence, you and I and Handle are like a dying breed of gunslingers in early 1900's...were on our last run:(
Nah, don't think so...;)
 
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Read before you enter college...
 
I say the opposite stick to IWM,SPY,QQQ
My preference for SPY with some IWM
Ur so smart. I wouldn’t say this is the opposite of what I said at all. Buying an index fund is a choice you have to make. My advice was as apposed to trading.... what you choose to buy and hold is up to you.
 
I was also trading at your age ... (on demo, at first) ...

If it helps, this was how I learned ...

(a) By reading well-recommended, well-established, mainstream, orthodox trading textbooks, published by well-recommended, well-established, mainstream, orthodox publishers (i.e. "peer-reviewed" and "quality controlled") and avoiding internet "information";

(b) By getting in thousands of hours of screen-time after understanding all the basics of probability and statistics that any trader has to learn, to become profitable (so that my first 3 years' experience was genuinely 3 years' experience rather than the same one month's experience repeated 36 times over);

(c) By remaining aware, at all times, that in a field of endeavour with a huge turnover of participants very few of whom ever achieve profitability, most of the readily available "information", and especially the apparent consensuses of opinion, are always far more likely to be misguided than helpful;

(d) By having expert tuition available (from a successful family member in the trade);

(e) By NOT trading with real money until I'd proven, repeatedly and exhaustively and exhaustingly, on demo accounts, that I could avoid the five classic mistakes of aspiring traders, which are ...

  1. Not having a genuine edge (for which a common reason is reliance on inadequate, defective or mistaken "information": aspiring traders quite commonly seek short-cuts, imagining that if they just copy something that "works", they'll be able to bypass most of the actually-required education and experience phases);

    2. Confusing entry-methods with trading systems (for which a common reason is the deeply mistaken - but widely-held - impression that if one enters at a good time, everything else will somehow, magically "work out well" even without specifically considering trade-management subsequent to the entry- it won't);

    3. Under-capitalisation (for which a common reason is a misguided belief-set about what's typically achievable and over what time-frame: most people significantly overestimate what they can achieve quickly and easily, while significantly underestimating what they could achieve slowly and with difficulty);

    4. Excessive position-sizing (for which a common reason is just a general lack of statistical/probabilistic knowledge - most people aren't mathematically gifted, and it's really, really difficult to make a success of trading without some real understanding of the statistics and probabilities involved);

    5. Lack of patience, discipline and "psychological aspects" (on which I'm far too Aspergerish to be able or willing to comment further, myself, as I happen to have more patience and discipline than almost anyone else - and nearly pathologically so!).

Those five may also overlap, to some extent. I can't prove a word of it, needless to say, but I very strongly suspect that combinations of these five reasons, collectively, probably account for about 99% of all "aspiring trader failure".



These are the books that most helped me, and enabled me to trade profitably ...

Profitability & Systematic Trading (Michael Harris)

Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom (Van K. Tharp - an outstanding starting-point, especially the second half of the book)

Beyond Technical Analysis (Tushar S. Chande)

Understanding Price Action (Bob Volman)

The Mathematics of Money Management: Risk Analysis Techniques for Traders Ralph Vince (we all need some reliable understanding of what's in this book, although not necessarily from this specific source, before trading with real money)

Naked Forex: High-Probability Techniques for Trading Without Indicators (Alex Nekritin & Walter Peters - worth reading even if you don't intend to trade forex)

Daytrading (Joe Ross) (this is an updated re-issue of an earlier book - "Trading by the Minute", I think it was called)

Trading The Ross Hook (Joe Ross) (I keep coming back to this one again and again, because it's simple and logical and helpful, and the whole concept is based on one of the soundest principles of price action trading, namely "buy the dips in an uptrend and sell the rallies in a downtrend")

A Mathematician Plays The Market (John Allen Paulos)

Fooled By Randomness (Nassim Nicholas Taleb - very worthwhile!)

Why People Believe Weird Things (Michael Shermer) - this book and Taleb's, just above, are hugely helpful - albeit indirectly - for "understanding what's going on in forums"!

Trading Price Action Trends - Technical Analysis of Price Charts Bar by Bar for the Serious Trader (Al Brooks)

Trading Price Action Trading Ranges - Technical Analysis of Price Charts Bar by Bar for the Serious Trader
(Al Brooks)

Trading Price Action Reversals - Technical Analysis of Price Charts Bar by Bar for the Serious Trader
(Al Brooks)

"Warning": Al Brooks' set of three textbooks is kind of badly written and very badly edited (especially considering who the publisher is), and pretty difficult to plough through, but their content's excellent and was super-helpful to me, so those are a kind of "mixed recommendation": I actually think his online video course is much, much better and more helpful and more approachable, but it's also more expensive ($250, I think - but that's still very good value, in my opinion, for about 37 hours of instructional videos).
Just wanted to make this list easier for me to find in the future, in case any of the people in my meetup group are interested in this kind of stuff.
 
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