Details

Day Trading For Canadians For Dummies


Day Trading For Canadians For Dummies


2. Aufl.

von: Bryan Borzykowski, Ann C. Logue

19,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 10.11.2020
ISBN/EAN: 9781119736721
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 384

DRM-geschütztes eBook, Sie benötigen z.B. Adobe Digital Editions und eine Adobe ID zum Lesen.

Beschreibungen

<p><b>Purchase the power to trade smart</b></p> <p>Knowledge is power in any endeavor, and in the quick-action world of day trading—with roller-coaster markets, trade wars, and new tax laws inflating both opportunity and risk—being expertly informed is what gives you the power to trade fast with a cool head. The fully updated new edition of <i>Day Trading For Canadians For Dummies</i>—the first in almost a decade—gives you that knowledge, taking you from the basic machinery of short-term markets to building and sticking to a plan of action that keeps your bottom line sitting pretty.</p> <p>In an easy-to-follow, no-jargon style, award-winning business journalist Bryan Borzykowski provides a complete course in day trading. He covers the basics—such as raising capital and protecting one's principal investments—as well as specialized skills and knowledge, including risk-management strategies and ways to keep your emotions in check when you're plugged into an overheating market. You'll also find sample trading plans and important Canada-specific information, such as the best online brokerage firms, useful local resources, and an overview of the unique tax issues faced by Canadian traders.</p> <ul> <li>Evaluate strategy and performance</li> <li>Read market indicators</li> <li>Know your crypto</li> <li>Get your options</li> </ul> <p>For day traders, every second counts: With the help of <i>Day Trading For Canadians For Dummies</i>, you'll know where you want to be and how to get there—and how best to profit—fast.</p>
<p><b>Introduction</b><b> 1</b></p> <p>About This Book 2</p> <p>Foolish Assumptions 2</p> <p>Icons Used in This Book 3</p> <p>Beyond the Book 3</p> <p>Where to Go from Here 4</p> <p><b>Part 1: Day Trading Fundamentals 5</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 1: All You Need to know about Day Trading</b><b> 7</b></p> <p>It’s All in a Day’s Work 8</p> <p>Speculating, not hedging 9</p> <p>Understanding zero-sum markets 9</p> <p>Keeping the discipline: Closing out each night 10</p> <p>Committing to Trading as a Business 11</p> <p>Trading part-time: An okay idea if done right 11</p> <p>Trading as a hobby: A bad idea 12</p> <p>Working with a Small Number of Assets 13</p> <p>Managing your positions 14</p> <p>Focusing your attention 14</p> <p>Working with risk capital 15</p> <p>Personality Traits of Successful Day Traders 15</p> <p>Independence 16</p> <p>Quick-wittedness 17</p> <p>Decisiveness 17</p> <p>The Difference between Trading, Investing, and Gambling 18</p> <p>Investing is slow and steady 18</p> <p>Trading works fast 19</p> <p>Gambling is nothing more than luck 19</p> <p>Busting Some Day Trading Myths 20</p> <p>Myth #1: I can make millions 20</p> <p>Myth #2: Profits are guaranteed 21</p> <p>Myth #3: Day trading is dangerous 21</p> <p>Myth #4: It’s easy 21</p> <p>A lot of other worthwhile activities are stressful too 22</p> <p><b>Chapter 2: The Business of Day Trading</b><b> 25</b></p> <p>A Day in the Life of a Trader 26</p> <p>Setting Up Your Trading Laboratory 29</p> <p>Where to sit, where to work 30</p> <p>Count on your computer 30</p> <p>See it on the big screen 30</p> <p>Connect to the Internet 31</p> <p>Fix hours, vacation, and sick leave 31</p> <p>Stay virus- and hacker-free 32</p> <p>The department of redundancy department: Back up your systems 33</p> <p>Planning Your Trading Business 33</p> <p>Setting your goals 34</p> <p>Finding volatility 34</p> <p>Investing in your business 36</p> <p>Evaluating and revising your plan 36</p> <p>Getting Mobile with the Markets 37</p> <p>Controlling Your Emotions 37</p> <p>Dealing with destructive emotions 38</p> <p>Having an outlet 41</p> <p>Setting up support systems 42</p> <p>Watching your walk-away money 43</p> <p>Managing the Risks of Day Trading 44</p> <p>It’s your business 44</p> <p>It’s your life 44</p> <p><b>Chapter 3: Introducing the Financial Markets</b><b> 45</b></p> <p>Having a Firm Grasp How Markets Work 46</p> <p>Supply and demand 46</p> <p>Exchanges versus over the counter 47</p> <p>Commissions, fees, and spreads 48</p> <p>Understanding zero-sum games 49</p> <p>Opening an Account and Placing an Order 50</p> <p>Opening a brokerage account 50</p> <p>Placing your initial order 50</p> <p>Closing out your order 50</p> <p>Taking your cash 50</p> <p>Defining the Principles of Successful Day Trading 51</p> <p>Working with a small number of assets 51</p> <p>Managing your positions 52</p> <p>Focusing your attention 53</p> <p>Understanding Risk and Return 53</p> <p>Recognizing what risk is 54</p> <p>Getting rewarded for the risk you take 57</p> <p>Market efficiency in the real world 58</p> <p><b>Chapter 4: Assets 101: Stocks, Bonds, Currency, and Commodities</b><b> 61</b></p> <p>Grasping the Different Things to Trade 61</p> <p>Defining a Good Day Trading Asset 62</p> <p>Looking for liquidity 62</p> <p>Homing in on high volatility 64</p> <p>Staying within your budget 65</p> <p>Making sure you can use margin 65</p> <p>Taking a Closer Look at Stocks 67</p> <p>How Canadian and U.S stocks trade 68</p> <p>Where Canadian stocks trade 69</p> <p>Where U.S stocks trade 72</p> <p>The high-risk over-the-counter exchanges 74</p> <p>Dark pools 75</p> <p>Examining Bonds 75</p> <p>How bonds trade 76</p> <p>Listed bonds 77</p> <p>Over-the-counter trading 77</p> <p>Treasury dealers 77</p> <p>Cashing In with Currency 78</p> <p>How currency trades 78</p> <p>How the Canadian dollar is traded 79</p> <p>Where currency trades 79</p> <p>Considering Commodities and How They Trade 80</p> <p><b>Chapter 5: Assets 102: ETFs, Cryptocurrency, Options, and Derivatives</b><b> 81</b></p> <p>Explaining Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) in Plain English 82</p> <p>Traditional ETFs 83</p> <p>Strategy ETFs 84</p> <p>How ETFs trade 85</p> <p>ETF risks 86</p> <p>Getting Familiar with Cryptocurrency 86</p> <p>Bitcoin and blockchain 87</p> <p>Other cryptocurrencies 88</p> <p>Understanding how cryptocurrencies trade 89</p> <p>Avoiding the risks of cryptocurrencies 91</p> <p>Dealing in Derivatives 91</p> <p>Getting to know types of derivatives 92</p> <p>Buying and selling derivatives 94</p> <p>Comprehending Arbitrage and the Law of One Price 96</p> <p>Understanding how arbitrage and market efficiency interact 96</p> <p>Creating synthetic securities 97</p> <p>Taking advantage of price discrepancies 98</p> <p>Reducing arbitrage opportunities: High-frequency trading 99</p> <p><b>Chapter 6: Increasing Risk and Potential Return with Short Selling and Leverage</b><b> 101</b></p> <p>Understanding the Magic of Margin 102</p> <p>Making margin agreements 103</p> <p>Understanding the costs and fees of margin 104</p> <p>Managing margin calls 105</p> <p>Enjoying margin bargains for day traders 105</p> <p>The Switch-Up of Short Selling 105</p> <p>Selling short 106</p> <p>Short selling in Canada 107</p> <p>Choosing shorts 108</p> <p>Losing your shorts? 108</p> <p>Leveraging All Kinds of Accounts 109</p> <p>In stock and bond markets 109</p> <p>In options markets 110</p> <p>In futures trading 111</p> <p>In foreign exchange 112</p> <p>Borrowing in Your Trading Business 113</p> <p>Taking margin loans for cash flow 113</p> <p>Borrowing for trading capital 114</p> <p>Assessing Risks and Returns from Short Selling and Leverage 115</p> <p>Losing your money 115</p> <p>Losing your nerve 115</p> <p><b>Chapter 7: Managing Your Money and Positions</b><b> 117</b></p> <p>Setting Your Earnings Expectations 118</p> <p>Finding your expected return 118</p> <p>Determining your probability of ruin 119</p> <p>Gaining Advantage with a Money-Management Plan 121</p> <p>Minimizing damage while increasing opportunity 121</p> <p>Staying in the market longer 122</p> <p>Getting out before you lose everything 123</p> <p>Accounting for opportunity costs 123</p> <p>Examining Styles of Money Management 124</p> <p>Limiting portions: Fixed fractional 124</p> <p>Protecting profits: Fixed ratio 125</p> <p>Sticking to 10 percent: Gann 126</p> <p>Finding the ideal percentage: Kelly criterion 126</p> <p>Doubling down: Martingale 127</p> <p>Letting a program guide you: Monte Carlo simulation 127</p> <p>Considering past performance: Optimal F 128</p> <p>How Money Management Affects Your Return 129</p> <p>Planning for Your Profits 130</p> <p>Compounding interest 131</p> <p>Pyramiding power 131</p> <p>Making regular withdrawals 133</p> <p><b>Chapter 8: Planning Your Trades and Trading Your Plans</b><b> 135</b></p> <p>Starting to Plan Your Trades: Just the Basics, Please 136</p> <p>What do you want to trade? 136</p> <p>When will you be trading? 137</p> <p>How do you want to trade? 137</p> <p>Figuring out when to buy and when to sell 139</p> <p>Setting profit goals 139</p> <p>Setting limits on your trades 141</p> <p>What if the trade goes wrong? 144</p> <p>Closing Out Your Position 146</p> <p>Swing trading: Holding for days 146</p> <p>Position trading: Holding for weeks 147</p> <p>Investing: Holding for months or years 147</p> <p>Maxims and Clichés That Guide and Mislead Traders 147</p> <p>Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered 148</p> <p>In a bear market, the money returns to its rightful owners 148</p> <p>The trend is your friend 149</p> <p>Buy the rumour, sell the news 149</p> <p>Cut your losses and ride your winners 150</p> <p>You’re only as good as your last trade 150</p> <p>If you don’t know who you are, Wall Street is an expensive place to find out 151</p> <p>There are old traders and bold traders, but no old, bold traders 151</p> <p><b>Part 2: Developing Your Strategy 153</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 9: Picture This: Technical Analysis</b><b> 155</b></p> <p>Comparing Research Techniques Used in Day Trading 156</p> <p>Knowing what direction your research is 156</p> <p>Examining fundamental research 157</p> <p>Looking closer at technical analysis 158</p> <p>Using Technical Analysis 160</p> <p>First things first: Should you follow a trend or deviate from it? 160</p> <p>Finding trends 161</p> <p>Those ever-changing trends 165</p> <p>Reading the Charts 167</p> <p>Wave your pennants and flags 167</p> <p>Not just for the shower: Head and shoulders 169</p> <p>Drink from a cup and handle 169</p> <p>Mind the gap 170</p> <p>Grab your pitchforks! 171</p> <p>Considering Different Approaches to Technical Analysis 172</p> <p>Dow Theory 172</p> <p>Fibonacci numbers and the Elliott Wave 172</p> <p>Japanese candlestick charting 173</p> <p>The Gann system 174</p> <p>Avoiding Technical Analysis Pitfalls 174</p> <p>If it’s obvious, there’s no opportunity 175</p> <p>Overanalyzing the data 175</p> <p>Success may be the result of an upward bias 175</p> <p><b>Chapter 10: Following Market Indicators and Tried-and-True Day Trading Strategies</b><b> 177</b></p> <p>Psyching Out the Markets 178</p> <p>Betting on the buy side 179</p> <p>Avoiding the projection trap 179</p> <p>Taking the Temperature of the Market 180</p> <p>Pinpointing with price indicators 180</p> <p>Volume 183</p> <p>Volatility, crisis, and opportunity 185</p> <p>Measuring Money Flows 187</p> <p>Accumulation/distribution index 188</p> <p>Money-flow ratio and money-flow index 189</p> <p>Short interest ratios 189</p> <p>Considering Information That Crops Up during the Trading Day 190</p> <p>Price, time, and sales 191</p> <p>Order book 191</p> <p>Quote stuffing 192</p> <p>News flows 192</p> <p>Identifying Anomalies and Traps 193</p> <p>Bear traps and bull traps 194</p> <p>Calendar effects 195</p> <p><b>Chapter 11: Eliminating Emotion with Program Trading</b><b> 197</b></p> <p>Creating Your Own Trading Program 198</p> <p>Recognizing what you want to automate 198</p> <p>Knowing the limitations of robots 199</p> <p>Programming, the Day Trading Way 199</p> <p>Looking at basic brokerage offerings 200</p> <p>Adding a trading platform 200</p> <p>Finding trading modules 200</p> <p>Backtesting Once, Backtesting Twice 201</p> <p>Building on Some Standard Strategies 201</p> <p>Range trading 202</p> <p>Contrarian trading 202</p> <p>News trading 203</p> <p>Pairs trading 203</p> <p>Arbitraging for Fun and Profit 203</p> <p>Understanding how arbitrage and market efficiency interact 204</p> <p>Taking advantages of price discrepancies 205</p> <p>Scalping, the Dangerous Game 206</p> <p>Understanding Risk Arbitrage and Its Tools 207</p> <p>Arbitrating derivatives 208</p> <p>Levering with leverage 209</p> <p>Short selling 209</p> <p>Creating synthetic securities 209</p> <p>Examining Arbitrage Strategies 210</p> <p>Convertible arbitrage 211</p> <p>ETF arbitrage 211</p> <p>Fixed income and interest-rate arbitrage 212</p> <p>Index arbitrage 213</p> <p>Merger arbitrage 213</p> <p>Option arbitrage 215</p> <p>Watching Out for Those Pesky Transaction Costs 215</p> <p><b>Chapter 12: Day Trading for Investors</b><b> 217</b></p> <p>Recognizing What Investors Can Glean from Traders 217</p> <p>Being disciplined 218</p> <p>Dealing with breaking news and breaking markets 219</p> <p>Setting targets and limits 220</p> <p>Judging execution quality 221</p> <p>Applying Momentum 223</p> <p>Earnings momentum 224</p> <p>Price momentum 224</p> <p>For investors only: Momentum-research systems 225</p> <p>When an Investor Considers Trading 227</p> <p>The idea has a short shelf life 227</p> <p>Your research shows you some trading opportunities 227</p> <p>You see some great short opportunities 228</p> <p><b>Chapter 13: Researching Research Services</b><b> 229</b></p> <p>Understanding the Trade of Trading 230</p> <p>Enjoying freebies from the exchanges and the regulators 230</p> <p>Hitting the (virtual) road for conferences 233</p> <p>Taking training classes 234</p> <p>Getting the Research You Need 236</p> <p>(Price) Quote me on that 237</p> <p>Charting your strategy 238</p> <p>News, newsletters, gurus, and strategic advice 240</p> <p>Doing Your Due Diligence 243</p> <p>Where to start your research 243</p> <p>Questions to ask 244</p> <p><b>Chapter 14: Testing, Tracking, and Evaluating Performance</b><b> 247</b></p> <p>Before You Trade: Testing Your System 247</p> <p>Backtesting 248</p> <p>Simulation trading 250</p> <p>Backtesting and simulation software 251</p> <p>During the Day: Tracking Your Trades 254</p> <p>Setting up your spreadsheet 254</p> <p>Pulling everything into a profit and loss statement 255</p> <p>Keeping a trading diary 256</p> <p>After You Trade: Calculating Overall Performance 257</p> <p>Reviewing types of return 258</p> <p>Calculating returns 258</p> <p>Determining the risk to your return 263</p> <p>Using benchmarks to evaluate your performance 265</p> <p><b>Part 3: Day Trading, Incorporated 267</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 15: Your Key Vendor: Your Broker</b><b> 269</b></p> <p>Choosing a Brokerage 270</p> <p>Getting proper pricing 270</p> <p>Evaluating types of platform 272</p> <p>Opening an account 274</p> <p>Exploring Brokers for Day Traders 275</p> <p>Brokers for stocks and a bit of the rest 275</p> <p>Brokers for foreign exchange 278</p> <p>Watching Out for Brokerage Scams 279</p> <p><b>Chapter 16: Regulation Right Now</b><b> 281</b></p> <p>How Regulations Created Day Trading 282</p> <p>Who Regulates What? 283</p> <p>Provincial securities commissions 284</p> <p>Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC) 285</p> <p>Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada (MFDA) 286</p> <p>The exchanges 286</p> <p>Brokerage Basics for Firm and Customer 286</p> <p>Are you suitable for day trading? 286</p> <p>Staying out of the money laundromat 287</p> <p>Rules for day traders 288</p> <p>Tax reporting 289</p> <p>Hot Tips and Insider Trading 289</p> <p>Taking on Partners 290</p> <p><b>Chapter 17: Choosing the Right Accounts</b><b> 291</b></p> <p>Understanding Investment Accounts 292</p> <p>RRSP 292</p> <p>TFSA 293</p> <p>RRIF 294</p> <p>Non-registered accounts 295</p> <p>Deciding on an Account to Use for Day Trading 295</p> <p><b>Chapter 18: Taxes for Traders</b><b> 297</b></p> <p>Are You a Trader or an Investor? 298</p> <p>Claiming Business Expenses 298</p> <p>Hiring a Tax Adviser 299</p> <p>The many flavours of tax experts 299</p> <p>Questions to ask a prospective adviser 300</p> <p>You still want to do it yourself? 301</p> <p>What is Income, Anyway? 302</p> <p>Earned income 302</p> <p>Capital gains and losses 303</p> <p>Tracking Your Investment Expenses 305</p> <p>Qualified and deductible expenses 306</p> <p>Paying Taxes All Year 308</p> <p>Using Your RRSP 308</p> <p>Trading within a Tax-Free Savings Account 309</p> <p><b>Part 4: The Part of Tens 311</b></p> <p><b>Chapter 19: Ten Good Reasons to Day Trade</b><b> 313</b></p> <p>You Love Being Independent 313</p> <p>You Want to Work Anywhere You Like 314</p> <p>You’re Comfortable with Technology 314</p> <p>You Want to Eat What You Kill 315</p> <p>You Love the Markets 315</p> <p>You Have Market Experience 315</p> <p>You’ve Studied Trading Systems and Know What Works for You 316</p> <p>You’re Decisive and Persistent 316</p> <p>You Can Afford to Lose Money 317</p> <p>You Have a Support System 318</p> <p><b>Chapter 20: Ten Common Day Trading Mistakes</b><b> 319</b></p> <p>Starting with Unrealistic Expectations 319</p> <p>Beginning without a Business and Trading Plan 320</p> <p>Ignoring Cash Management 321</p> <p>Failing to Manage Risk 321</p> <p>Not Committing the Time and Money to Do It Right 322</p> <p>Chasing the Herd 322</p> <p>Switching between Research Systems 323</p> <p>Overtrading 323</p> <p>Sticking Too Long with Losing Trades 324</p> <p>Getting Too Emotionally Involved 324</p> <p><b>Chapter 21: Almost Ten Alternatives to Day Trading</b><b> 325</b></p> <p>Proprietary Trading for an Investment Company or Hedge Fund 325</p> <p>Trading for an Agricultural, Energy, or Commodities Company 326</p> <p>Joining a Market Making Firm 326</p> <p>Traditional Investing for Your Own Account 327</p> <p>Taking a Swing at Swing Trading 327</p> <p>Gambling for the Fun of It 327</p> <p>Playing Day Trading Video Games 328</p> <p>Trading in Demo Accounts 328</p> <p>Participating in a Trading Contest 329</p> <p><b>Chapter 22: Ten Tested Money-Management Techniques</b><b> 331</b></p> <p>Taking Money off the Table 332</p> <p>Using Stops 332</p> <p>Applying Gann’s 10 Percent Rule 332</p> <p>Limiting Your Losses with the Fixed Fractional System 333</p> <p>Increasing Returns with the Fixed-Ratio System 333</p> <p>Following the Kelly Criterion Formula 334</p> <p>Figuring the Amount to Trade with Optimal F 334</p> <p>Measuring Risk and Sizing Trades with Monte Carlo Simulation 335</p> <p>Taking a Risk with the Martingale System 335</p> <p>Throwing It to the Fates 336</p> <p>Appendix: Additional Resources For Day Traders 337</p> <p>Index 345</p>
<p><b>Bryan Borzykowski</b> is Founder and President of ALLCAPS Content. He is a renowned business journalist and has written for outlets including <i>The New York Times, CNBC, CNNMoney</i>, and more. <b>Ann Logue, MBA</b> teaches finance at the University of Illinois. She's also a finance writer and has edited publications on equity trading and risk management.
<ul> <li>Position yourself for day trading success</li> <li>Manage risk as you buy and sell</li> <li>Day trade stocks in today's market</li> </ul> <p><b>Day trade with knowledge and confidence </b> <p>Few market activities are as fast-paced and exciting as day trading. Learn the nuts-and-bolts of day trading and get a step-by-step plan of action for getting started in the markets. You'll discover how to understand short-term markets and positions, how to raise capital, and how to protect your principal investment. With exclusive, Canadian-specific content, the authors will guide you through everything you need to know to start day trading. <p><b>Inside...</b> <ul> <li>A step-by-step plan to get started</li> <li>Protect your initial investment</li> <li>Diversify your portfolio</li> <li>Avoid scams and tricks</li> <li>Get fantastic trading tips</li> <li>Get insightful strategies</li> </ul>

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