changing my mind on day trading

are you a bot?

it sounds like some form of bot language.
haha why do you think I'm a bot, I'm commenting on the main post. I went through the same thing. Completely changed my view on day trading and shifted from swing trading to daytrading.
 
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haha why do you think I'm a bot, I'm commenting on the main post. I went through the same thing. Completely changed my view on day trading and shifted from swing trading to daytrading.

ok. now you sound like a nonbot.

I also changed from investing to swing trading to day trading.
 
Daytrading used to be the way to go until recently, I would say within the last year or two with the Asian markets becoming more and more active, I am seeing HUGE and I mean HUGE swings in the overnight futures market. So if you have realtime futures data and enough capital and stomach for huge swings, the overnight market can be very very lucrative if you feel like staying up all night up and then all day during the North American market, basically staying up for 20 hours.


Interesting... sounds like fun :)
I fall asleep everyday at 6 p.m. and wake at 9 again and sleep at 2 a.m. and wake 8 a.m. lol
 
Day trading is risky but can be very profitable if done carefully. I think a common problem with most day traders is that they think that they are obliged to make tens or hundreds of trades in a day. However, there isn't any such rule. Personally, I never take more than 3 trades a day and it’s working perfectly well for me.
 
I like your selectivity. Very clever :fistbump:

Day trading is risky but can be very profitable if done carefully. I think a common problem with most day traders is that they think that they are obliged to make tens or hundreds of trades in a day. However, there isn't any such rule. Personally, I never take more than 3 trades a day and it’s working perfectly well for me.
 
Only futile traders will attempt to change your mind by their inability to achieve success.
What does that even mean? I take advice from anyone who can constructively challenge me and help me improve or change my mind about something that I had blinders on. Good traders are always open to be corrected (with facts) and challenged that is why every successful hedge fund trader constantly communicates and listens to other fellow traders in the community. That is why investment banks or money funds hire fresh blood because after a long time in this business you develop tunnel vision. As much as I disagree with you on cryptos but if you have something to say that disagrees with my approach I am more than open and willing to listen to anything you might have to say. Feeling that we are settled and being closed minded about other approaches that may run counter our approaches to trading is often a sign of arrogance and arrogance is often times the mind set right before downfall.

Then, by his own definition, isn't Sprout self-identifying as a futile trader trying to change the mind of others?
 
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interesting- try searching for anything like "why day trading is great" and all you come up with are negative articles of why day trading is bad. I see those articles are mostly referring to the traditional scalping of 20-40 trades per day. I am doing 2-3, so I will call that "low volume" day trading.

Day trading, if well executed, IS great. You don't tie up capital, so you can flip, flip, flip fully capitalized again, and again, and again. If you end the day flat, it doesn't matter what the market does in any session, on any open. Next day you get to cherry pick a brand new entry point. Of course if you screw something up, it can go sour, so craft matters.

There's another reason you don't see a lot of raving articles about day trading. Good day traders have found something that consistently works for them. Part of that means staying grounded, within yourself, keeping a level head, not getting cocky. "Staying in the zone," so to speak. If it's working, they don't need to tout it publicly, there's no underlying need to be heard. Doing so only creates risk. Since they know most traders don't make money, why take on the headache of a lot of grumpy comments from naysayers? It's a distraction that risks throwing them off their game. The good ones only engage to improve craft, but not that often, since they're busy and already doing well. They stay low profile.

Side Note:
2-3 trades per day isn't really scalping. Intra-day swinging or "flipping" is more accurate, since normal industry scalping at trading houses is about one every two minutes. I scalp every day and usually end up with between 500-1500 trades by day's end, no automation is involved, just special software for lightning speed on ordering, fills, and exits, which allows for me to focus on reading momentum instead of fumbling with orders.
 
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