Quote from heynow:
Now when I say all daytraders, I'm talking about independent discretionary daytraders. I'm not talking about HFs running algo bots and doing market making, arbitrage, etc.
The reasons why I feel a daytrader is ultimately doomed for failure:
1 Limiting profits. The very nature of daytrading means that you are cutting your profit potential short by not holding for more than a day or a few hours. There are are moves that go on for days, weeks, and months with only the slightest pullbacks. These are the moves that make your year.
2 Daytrading is a very addicting and can become compulsive. The more frequently you trade the more addicted you become to the action. Also the more frequently you trade the more compulsive your actions become.
3 Irrational fear of holding overnight. Many daytraders think that daytrading is actually less risky than holding overnights because they think they have too much "headline" or "overnight" risk even when they have a position that is deep ITM.
4 Daytraders often use excess leverage. Futures and options offer so much leverage that an intraday move can blow u out.
5 Daytraders don't often diversify. Its really hard to intraday trade a portfolio, so most guys just concentrate positions in one or two instruments.
6 Great profit potential also means greater loss potential. Sure you can make 2x the daily range daytrading but more often you can lose 2x the daily range.
7 Daytrading is ultimately a non scalable skill.
I admit I'm flat YTD and thus in a long slump. I had three 25k losses in the past three months. But my average for the past 240 sessions is still 600/day. I want to finally give up daytrading and start swing trading but don't want to give up my "bread and butter". And I feel i can't grow my account swing trading as fast as I can daytrading.
Has anyone successfully made the transition? Is swing trading better? I'm just tired of trading intraday noise.
This site is supported by brokers and a whole cottage industry that thrives off day traders and scalpers. You will most likely catch a lot of flack about your assumption.
That being said, I see day traders run in and out of the market for crumbs. Had they just sat there they would have had steak.
Brokers love day traders.