Quote from tradersaavy:
I second the notion for charts.
I am trying to put the final touches on a method similair to yours that uses index futures.
I look at a larger timeframe chart and look for the larger timeframe to be stretched into the outer bands and then go to a smaller timeframe for entry looking for price to go back to around the 20sma of the larger timeframe.
I use 2-day and 1-day charts with no technical indicators for trading breakouts. I look at price, volume, sector, news and the direction of the overall market intraday. Risk is the big thing in daytrading and I know of only two ways to limit risk: Trade in the direction of the market and keep a tight stoploss.
This is how I do it:
I do a scan and the results are displayed on mini charts. I scroll through the charts and see three stocks that are in a gradual uptrend since 9:35am. It's now 10:30am. The indices are up and having pulled back have turned up again.
I watch the three stocks. They all make it to the previous day's high resistance at different times with .40c - .50c range on them. All three stocks cleared resistance and continued in their uptrend after a breif pause at previous day's high. Will these three stocks continue in their uptrend and do an additional 1/2 point or more, each? There is no way to tell. There is no way to tell.
I put 1000 shares on each of the three stocks just as soon as they were .20c above previous day's high resistance. I set an alert at previous day's high as my ultimate stop loss and I set an alert .30c above my buy price as an initial profit target.
An hour later one stock is doing .40c above buy price. Another stock is doing .25c above buy price. The third stock pulled back .10c below buy price after being up .20c above buy price, and I closed that position.
I now have $400 profit on the first position and $250 on the second position. That's $650 gross profit. The third position is a $100 loss. Add to that loss commissions of $20 per round trip on three trades (=$60) for a total of $160 to subtract from the gross profit ($650), for a net profit of $490.
That's daytrading. Stocks go up every day. If you knew which one stock will continue it's uptrend to give you 1/2 point, you need only put all your money on that one stock for a 1/2 point profit, and repeat that every day.
Since you do not know which stocks will continue in their uptrend you must do more than one position and limit your loss on the stock(s) that pull back below your buy price.
Apart from rare hunches and the few geniuses out there that could be trading stocks and can hit trades dead on, mere mortals must "catch a trend" and subtract losses.