I'm extremely new to the world of stocks and investing. I'm literally coming from the world of engineering and science. I could say the two can go hand in hand since we are analytical individuals that study charts, graphs and data. I'm interested in the DAY Trading. What tips and advices can one suggest for someone who has never touched that industry. What books can you recommend for the absolute beginner. I understand that the journey of trading at first will be rigorous and made of loses. However, i feel that with that mentality i will never grasp how to day trade. In other words, i am not scared to lose hard earn money if in the end i come out winning with either experience or new attitudes. Any other recommended software i should use, preferably mobile so i can see it on the go.
I apologies if this is the wrong thread for this section, i was hoping this site would welcome noobs and beginners but from the sections offered, it seems it is only for the experience.
Hope to hear from you all soon, thank you,
Jonathan Vazquez
Forget mobile... you need to be sitting there and focused. Most advice on here will be useless. People might give you bits and pieces, but until you put all the pieces together, you will be losing. Since nobody is going to help enough by giving you many pieces, most of the info given will be insufficient to actually help. (if not down right wrong and dangerous)
Saying all that, the biggest thing you need to get into your head is the statistical nature of this game. You aren't going to find the holy grail that gets you 90% win rates. The best looking trades will fail, and the worst looking ones will succeed. What I mean by fail or succeed is that they will either hit a stop or profit target, and you never know which will happen.
Since one of two things will happen, when you're starting out, always shoot for one of these 2 things happening. ie. You take a trade and let it either hit your stop or target. When you start fiddling with it after you entered, you will be doing more harm than good. You may think that you can prevent a bigger loss by getting out early if its not looking good, but many times it might turn around and be a winner before it hits the stop and becomes a loser. Likewise, if you get out too soon before hitting your profit because you're too scared to lose what you have, this will affect your overall winnings. You're looking to count your wins and losses after 20 trades, 30 trades, 50 trades. The very next trade doesn't matter, its just one of many. If you find you are losing every trade, consider that you just need to do the opposite.
After doing a bunch of trades, it should become pretty apparent if your stop is too tight (ie. it always gets hit), or your profit is too far away (ie. it never hits), and then you just need to figure out a better set of parameters. If all you do is start out by taking trades with 1:1 risk to reward ratio, you probably won't make money (since you will lose more than half probably), but you should have some wins in there too to give you encouragement. If you focus on a R:R of 1:2, so you're making twice as much on the trades that win vs. trades that lose, and you manage to get about 50% wins, you're absolutely golden and will be doing better than most.
If you spend any amount of time here at ET, you will learn those who trade, actually call out trades sometimes (or shows trades after the fact), and they have losses. Those who just talk about trading, and sound brilliant, probably don't even trade. Discussions about how to trade without showing trades or examples are pretty much useless. Most members and discussions on here will be useless when it comes to progressing your trading career. You will only learn by doing this yourself. Even if you spend 6 months reading everything you can, and figure out who is legit and who isn't, you still won't be much further along because those legit guys say very, very little about actual trading. Many of the legit guys are now barely posting, and only reading, or not posting about trading. But once again, unless they say they will let you follow their trades so you can watch and learn (which they won't), then most help will be not that beneficial for you.
Everyone says the best way to learn is to start with a mentor, but you will probably have more luck of making it in Hollywood than finding a mentor who is himself profitable and willing to help. So if you haven't clued in yet, what I'm saying is you're on your own, but knowing this can save you quite a bit of time.
