Your Trading Objective: Why is that so Important?


You've decided to try your luck at trading stocks or commodities, but so called experts tell you that you need to determine your trading objective. What exactly does that mean and why is it so important? Well, it's really a question of your trading philosophy. A trading objective basically identifies the horizon on which you've chosen to trade. For instance, a day trader will have totally different set of objectives and goals than will a long term investor. They look at the market through different sets of glasses and it can be very dangerous to your trading account to try to mix and match trading styles.

Let's first look at the most common trading objective - long term investing. Long term traders are usually more concerned with company fundamentals such as earnings, annual growth, and sales to name a few. They may use some technical indicators such as price charts and graphs to help time their entry points, but fundamentals are generally more important to them. Long term traders are looking for that home run trade that will pay very large profits. Therefore, they can be right as little as 20-25% of the time and stay earn a nice profit. They have been known to hold a given stock for several years.

The other end of the trading objective is the day trader. Day traders go into the market each day looking for quick small moves of less than a point - known as "scalps". They use technical charts exclusively and typically buy large positions which they often sell within minutes. Their profits on a given trade is much smaller than those a long term investor would generally make, so therefore day traders must have a very high winning percentage of trades - usually 60% or more to be successful.

These trading objectives are two extremes and are discussed here to illustrate a very important point. If a day trader takes a position based on short term indicators from a chart or other technical indicator, it would be a huge mistake to change that trade into a long term investment because the trade setup wasn't based on a long term trade. Inexperienced traders will often do this when a short term or swing trade goes bad. Instead of cutting their losses by simply selling the position, they change it into a long term trade hoping that the position will become profitable. DO NOT change your trading objective - stick to you trading plan. This rule will protect your account.

Chuck Cox is a Technical Writer and Industrial Scientist by professional with a background in statistics. He has used mathematical and statistical methods to invest and trade in the stock, futures, and options markets. Chuck has owned various businesses and presently operates several websites. To investigate and learn more about trading stocks, visit his website, http://www.earncashathometoday.com/trading-stocks.htm


MORE RESOURCES:

Financial planning: It pays to start right
American Chronicle, CA - Aug 26, 2008
Assets can be your bank balance, investment in stocks, mutual funds, gold, property, insurances, vehicles etc. And liabilities are the loans to repay (they ...


Inheritance strategy: Pay off credit cards, evaluate the mortgage
CreditCards.com, TX - Aug 26, 2008
Stocks, mutual funds, exchange traded funds (ETFs) are among different types of variable investments. With fixed investments, you receive a fixed rate of ...


Insurers to tap into real estate
Shanghai Daily, China - Aug 25, 2008
The investment channels could be widened to marketable securities such as bonds, stocks, mutual funds and real estate, according to the draft, submitted to ...


Money Tip: ETFs stable in turbulent markets
Baxter Bulletin, AR - Jul 25, 2008
Trading in exchange-traded funds has been stable and strong despite recent troubles in financial markets. Like mutual funds, ETFs are single investments ...


SEC Weighs Overhaul of 'Index' Annuities
Wall Street Journal - Aug 16, 2008
But the SEC wants indexed annuities to be considered "securities," just like stocks, mutual funds and even variable annuities. ...


Ibbotson Selected by ING Financial Advisers to Create Model ...
MarketWatch - Aug 13, 2008
Morningstar provides data on more than 280000 investment offerings, including stocks, mutual funds, and similar vehicles. The company has operations in 18 ...


New investor email lists and leads posted - including active real ...
PR Web (press release), WA - Aug 20, 2008
... finance executives, owners of tax free investments, Canadian investment responders, individuals interested in stocks, mutual funds, rare coins, ...


Banking crisis a surprise most saw coming
The Age, Australia - Aug 5, 2008
And, as the FDIC site explains, it does not insure investments held in banks such as bonds, stocks, mutual funds, life insurance policies, or municipal ...


Easy-to-Use Solution Allows Retirement Plans to Offer Allocation ...
MarketWatch - Aug 6, 2008
Morningstar provides data on more than 270000 investment offerings, including stocks, mutual funds, and similar vehicles. The company has operations in 18 ...


Investing early is best strategy
Miramichi Leader, Canada - Aug 19, 2008
You can invest in equity in many ways: stocks, mutual funds, indexes or private companies. Yes, there are risks, but there is also the potential for greater ...

Stocks-Mutual-Funds - Google News

home | site map
© 2006