Why is day trading considered dangerous?

I read all the articles about day trading, 99% of them said it is one of the most dangerous things in the world.

I just can't understand why, why day trading is dangerous? as far as I see it, it is much much safer to day trade than to hold a stock over night(I wouldn't be able to sleep)

If you hold a stock for 60 minutes for example, the chances that the stock will drop are pretty low.
If you hold it for years you are very exposed to events that will wipe out your money.

Also holding a stock over night when you have no control over your stock (the price changes drastically over night) is a lot more gambling than day trading will ever be.

Can anyone explain to me why day trading is considered not safe?
Thanks in advance

As a general rule, I would consider short term trading less dangerous. However I'm not sure if you are using the word dangerous when you mean less profitable. I can tell you that managing risk is easier with no overnight positions and shorter time spans. However, day trading is a difficult skill to learn and be consistent. Unless you are at a prop firm using extreme leverage, you would be more apt to loss money slowly if you are wrong. So for that, I'd say vs other trading, not as dangerous.
 
Day trading is considered dangerous by people who think that there's a fundamental reason for every tick in the market. For one who can read price, day trading is no different than swing trading or even long-term trading. You're trading the same price formations except on a smaller time frame.
 
I read all the articles about day trading, 99% of them said it is one of the most dangerous things in the world.
The articles refer to the statistics, the statistics are based on those that start in bullet proof mode and come out shell shocked. When you understand human nature you understand much more about trading. Everyone one of those day traders or I should say day losers were focusing on the money and did not pay the 10 year tuition. Day trading requires a thought process that is based on fast processing times and years of making mistakes, for those that fit this profile Money Trust is 100 % correct. I ask you "kfir" do you want to make mistakes for the next 5 years and stick with it to come out the other side in 10 as a profitable day trader ?

Day trading is considered dangerous by people who think that there's a fundamental reason for every tick in the market. For one who can read price, day trading is no different than swing trading or even long-term trading. You're trading the same price formations except on a smaller time frame.
 
Day traders are trading noise ( as defined academically) -- edges do exist intraday but they never last and are fleeting-- your competition are firms with level 3 access who can see your orders etc, not to mention HFT -- in other words, retail chart price readers simply can not compete and the playing field is far from even on short time frames--- folks who tell you differently likely work for the wall street machine or have other nefarious interests, SO, please be very CAUTIOUS listening to anonymous posters with "hard to believe" tales and talk of fractals, auction markets, and psychobabble.

I spent a week at Knight back in early 2000's observing and witnessed the way things really work-- talk about a wake up call! day traders were sitting ducks for these guys. surf
 
The articles refer to the statistics, the statistics are based on those that start in bullet proof mode and come out shell shocked. When you understand human nature you understand much more about trading. Everyone one of those day traders or I should say day losers were focusing on the money and did not pay the 10 year tuition. Day trading requires a thought process that is based on fast processing times and years of making mistakes, for those that fit this profile Money Trust is 100 % correct. I ask you "kfir" do you want to make mistakes for the next 5 years and stick with it to come out the other side in 10 as a profitable day trader ?

Nice platitude, but Serious question, what does human nature have to do with HFT? Over 80% of all stock trades are done by HFT computers --- so how does understanding human nature help you win against super computer power? I would think understanding code makes much more sense for those looking for real edges rather than 1970 style platitudes--- peace, surf
 
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Day traders are trading noise ( as defined academically) (academics don't make good traders ??)-- edges do exist intraday but they never last and are fleeting-- (correct that's why the successful are flexible each and everyday)your competition are firms with level 3 access who can see your orders etc, not to mention HFT -- in other words, retail chart price readers simply can not compete and the playing field is far from even on short time frames--(pretty generic comment don't you think do you live in a cave )- folks who tell you differently likely work for the wall street machine or have other nefarious interests, SO, please be very CAUTIOUS listening to anonymous posters with "hard to believe" tales and talk of fractals, auction markets, and psychobabble.

I spent a week at Knight back in early 2000's observing and witnessed the way things really work-- talk about a wake up call! day traders were sitting ducks( anyone with a stop of 3 points is a sitting duck agreed ) for these guys. surf
 
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