I definitely fit into the small-time investor category and will be able to dedicate about an hour a day once I get started.
With this kind of market interest I strongly suggest you look into a position trading style. (Trades taken off weekly charts with multi week holding expectations.) You can enter and manage these trades with stop and limit orders, so they donât need to be babysat . If you have the patience, this style can offer some of the nicest risk/reward trades there are.
To learn, I suggest the T/A bible âanalysis of stock trendsâ by edwards and magee and then back it up with Alan Farleyâs âthe master swing traderâ. That should give you al the chart patterns you could need
Then the single best book ever written about trading...âreminiscences of a stock operatorâ This guy was a great position trader, and this book has many MANY trading lessons buried within.
Two other must haves IMO are âthe way of the warrior traderâ by Dr. Mcall, and âTrading in the zoneâ By Mark Douglas. These are both books on the mental game.
Spend a lot of time looking over charts...then look at a few more

On a weekly chart the trends are obvious. Look at how these stocks change trend, and what patterns exist as the bulls give way to the bears, and vise versa.
Once you have a basic feel from your paper trading, open an account with a per share fee broker, and start trading with 50 shares. Trade so small that it seems a total waste of your time. This will keep your initial losses small and give you the sustainability needed to make it to profitability. Once you feel comfortable with your skills, you can step up the size, and start making some real money!
Good Luck, and take it slow.... Many would be great traders wash out because they started pushing too early in the game. Take the time to learn, and the market will reward your patience!!!
Good luck and good trading,
-Bo Yoder