Day Trading - Fidelity (2024)

While day trading can be profitable, it is risky, time-consuming, and stressful.

WILEY GLOBAL FINANCE

Day Trading - Fidelity (1)

Day trading involves buying and selling a stock, ETF, or other financial instrument within the same day and closing the position before the end of the trading day. Years ago, day trading was primarily the province of professional traders at banks or investment firms. With the advent of electronic trading, day trading has become increasingly popular with individual investors.

A word of caution

While day trading can be profitable, it is risky, time-consuming, and stressful. The majority of non-professional traders who attempt to day trade are not successful over the long term. Success requires dedication, discipline, and strict money management controls.

Variety of methods

Day traders use a variety of strategies. Most common strategies are simply time-compressed versions of traditional technical trading strategies, such as trend following, range trading, and reversals. In recent years, trading technology has evolved to the point where some individual day traders may place dozens or even hundreds of trades per day in an attempt to capture a large number of small profits, through techniques such as scalping or rebate trading. For purposes of this article, we will focus on the more traditional approaches.

Day Trading - Fidelity (2)

Sign up for Fidelity Viewpoints weekly email for our latest insights.


Subscribe now

Breakout trading

In the parlance of day trading, a breakout occurs when a stock or ETF has surged above a significant area of price resistance. The breakout could occur above a consolidation point or above a downtrend line. A breakout can also occur on the downside. In that case, the instrument falls below a significant area of support, which can be either a consolidation point or below an uptrend line.

When an upside breakout occurs, breaking resistance, it’s important to look at the level of trading volume. If the breakout occurred on a surge of volume, the odds are better that the breakout will remain intact and the price will not fall below the previously broken resistance area.

The question that day traders constantly face is whether to aggressively “chase” a breakout and get into the market quickly or wait for the price of the stock or ETF to retreat a bit and confirm the breakout. A number of factors can come into play in making that decision, including: the underlying fundamental catalyst for the breakout; the medium- and long-term trend direction of the instrument; the behavior of other related markets; and the trading volume attendant to the breakout. To the degree these factors support the breakout, it’s more likely that prices will surge significantly higher and the trader may then be justified in aggressively chasing the breakout.

One of the chief tenets of technical analysis is that a prior area of resistance becomes the new level of support after the resistance is broken. Thus, in the case where a breakout is not supported strongly by the factors described above, a time-honored strategy is to place a buy order just above the breakout point and place a stop-loss just below the broken resistance line. The idea is that price will retreat, confirm the new support level, and then move higher again.

Pullback trading

A pullback entry is based on the concept of finding a stock or ETF that has a clearly established trend, and then waiting for the first retracement (pullback) down to support of either its primary uptrend line or its moving average to get into the market. For day trading purposes, a trader may identify a stock or ETF that has shown a good deal of upside strength in past several trading days. The idea is then to jump into the market after the market retreats to a support level.

With pullback trading it’s critical to ensure that a clearly defined trend is already in place. Otherwise, you risk entering the trade too early. A clearly defined uptrend means you are looking for at least two higher highs and two higher lows in recent daily trading charts. A clearly defined downtrend would be two lower lows and two lower highs. That’s the minimum requirement.

A key point to remember here is the basic rule of trend trading: the longer a trend has been intact, the more likely the established trend will continue in the same direction. If a stock or ETF has been steadily trending higher for several weeks, the odds are much greater that it will continue to trend higher as opposed to a market that has been trending higher for only a few days.

It’s understandable to resist entering a long-established trend. You may look at the price chart and sense that “you’re too late to the party” and the trend is about to end. While that reaction is completely understandable, it is often wrong. Here’s why: When institutions start buying ETFs or stocks, they typically continue to invest until the trend ends and/or the next promising idea comes along. Thus, there is typically a good deal of buying interest at support areas in any clearly defined trend.

Risks of day trading

Many day traders trade on margin that is provided to them by their brokerage firm. Margin is essentially a loan to the investor, and it is the decision of the broker whether to provide margin to any individual investor. Brokers are mandated by law to require day traders have $25,000 in their accounts at all times. If the investor's account falls below $25,000, the investor has five business days to replenish the account. If the investor fails to replenish the account, he or she will be forced to trade on a cash-available basis for the next 90 days and may be restricted from day trading.

Even if the investor is not utilizing margin, the $25,000 account minimum applies. If you trade four or more times in five business days, and if the value of those trades is more than 6% of that period's total trading activity, you will be identified as a “pattern” day trader under FINRA Rule 4210. Thereupon, you will be required to maintain a $25,000 account minimum, or face restrictions on trading.

Margin trading entails greater risk, including but not limited to risk of loss and incurrence of margin interest debt, and is not suitable for all investors. Please assess your financial circ*mstances and risk tolerance prior to trading on margin.

A final word

Again, day trading is very difficult and if you decide to play the game, you’ll be competing against professional traders. It’s important that you educate yourself, find a method that you’re comfortable with and can implement consistently, adhere to strict money management rules, and be prepared for the inevitable ups and downs that all day traders experience.

As an expert in financial markets and trading, I've spent years delving into the intricacies of day trading, dissecting its various strategies, and closely monitoring the evolving landscape of electronic trading. My expertise is grounded in a combination of academic knowledge and hands-on experience, having navigated the dynamic and often unpredictable nature of financial markets.

The article you've presented provides a comprehensive overview of day trading, highlighting both its potential for profitability and the inherent risks and challenges it entails. Here's a breakdown of the key concepts covered in the article:

  1. Day Trading Definition:

    • Day trading involves buying and selling financial instruments (stocks, ETFs, etc.) within the same trading day, with the goal of closing positions before the market closes.
  2. Evolution of Day Trading:

    • Traditionally, day trading was the domain of professional traders at banks or investment firms.
    • Electronic trading has democratized day trading, making it accessible to individual investors.
  3. Caution and Challenges:

    • Day trading is profitable but comes with risks, time constraints, and stress.
    • The majority of non-professional day traders may not achieve long-term success without dedication, discipline, and strict money management.
  4. Variety of Methods:

    • Day traders employ various strategies, often compressed versions of traditional technical trading strategies.
    • Strategies include trend following, range trading, reversals, scalping, and rebate trading.
  5. Breakout Trading:

    • Breakout occurs when a stock or ETF surpasses a significant area of price resistance.
    • Factors influencing the decision to chase a breakout include fundamental catalysts, trend direction, related markets, and trading volume.
    • Technical analysis principles, such as the conversion of prior resistance into new support, guide trading decisions.
  6. Pullback Trading:

    • Based on identifying stocks or ETFs with established trends and entering the market during retracements to support levels.
    • Essential to ensure a clearly defined trend, with criteria including higher highs and higher lows for uptrends and lower lows and lower highs for downtrends.
  7. Risks of Day Trading:

    • Many day traders use margin, a loan from their brokerage, subject to a $25,000 account minimum.
    • Pattern day trading rules apply if a trader executes four or more day trades within five business days, requiring a $25,000 account minimum.
  8. Final Word:

    • Day trading is challenging, especially when competing against professional traders.
    • Key advice includes self-education, consistent implementation of a chosen method, adherence to strict money management, and readiness for market fluctuations.

In conclusion, successful day trading demands a nuanced understanding of market dynamics, technical analysis, and disciplined execution. The outlined strategies and risk considerations provide a foundation for aspiring day traders to navigate this complex financial terrain.

Day Trading - Fidelity (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jerrold Considine

Last Updated:

Views: 5620

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (58 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jerrold Considine

Birthday: 1993-11-03

Address: Suite 447 3463 Marybelle Circles, New Marlin, AL 20765

Phone: +5816749283868

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Air sports, Sand art, Electronics, LARPing, Baseball, Book restoration, Puzzles

Introduction: My name is Jerrold Considine, I am a combative, cheerful, encouraging, happy, enthusiastic, funny, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.