Other than experience, is there a way to increase my skills at timing the trades for day trading? I'm about 6 months in to my very unprofitable trading career and I keep executing the same issue... I'm picking the right stocks and buying, they end up correcting or reacting and hitting my stop loss at 3% and than shooting up so i "usually" miss out on the uptrend. is there any way to correct this? It happened twice to me today on ENPH and AMD
My assessment of your situation is that you are not a good fit for day trading and should just buy an index fund and long term invest.
I based my assessment on your question which says quite about about you - most of it negative:
Other than experience? How do you expect to learn except from researching and experimenting, and gaining experience from those efforts? What you're really asking for is some type of quickly learned "gimmick" that will magically unlock the "timing code" and give you great entries and exits.
It shows you don't respect the difficulty behind day trading, and think it's something that can be gained without much effort. You must not have done any research into it at all since then you would see the high failure rates of those who attempt this profession.
It can take many years to master day trading, if at all. And yet you seem surprised that you're not immediately successful after a mere 6 months.
I bet you're never practiced on a trading sim account and just jumped right into it with your own money. Do you have a trading plan for the best time to enter, what your profit targets should be, and the best place to put your stops? Have you tested your plan on a sim before using a real account? Are you taking lots of notes of what parts of the trade you got right or wrong, and what the possible solutions might be?
Does it sound like day trading takes a lot of effort and time to master? That's because it does. And if you were so fortunate after putting in those hard years of trial and error until you crafted your own working trading plan- would you be willing to just share your plan with someone looking for shortcuts that could jeopardize your plan from working in the future? Likely not, which is why you shouldn't expect anyone who has put the time in to just hand you information that you likely wouldn't understand anyway because it's not a "gimmick" but based on knowledge of price action behavior that you can only get by experience over time.
Professional day trading is one of the hardest careers you can choose. Unless you have someone in your family that is a successful day trader, you are going to have to mostly figure it out on your own, which as I said could take years and even then many fail. There are no short cuts. You really should take the time to count the costs and take a serious assessment if you want to proceed.