The Ultimate Trading Guide

Learn How To Day Trade Stocks Section


Learn How To Day Trade Stocks Navigation


|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Stock Trading Sites |
Online Financial Investing Courses |
Training Course Reviews For Day Stock Market Trading |
Best Day Trading |
Day Trading Computer |
Options Trading For Beginners |
Brain Trading System Forex |
Day Trading Tools |
User Review Of Online Trading Academy Classes |
Maryland Investing Your Money Online |
Learn Day Trading |
Day Trading Forex |
Best Online Investing |
Day Trade Stock Index Signals |
X Factor Software Forex Trading |

List of day trading Articles
List of day trading Links




Best Learn How To Day Trade Stocks products

"How Much Are You Losing Using The Wrong Trading Plan Or System?"

More Information



The POWER BREAK Challenge to turn $1,000 into $80,000 in 24 months. Order now using order button below...

More Information


Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to receive information on day trading
Email:
First Name:



Main Learn How To Day Trade Stocks sponsors

Learn How To Day Trade Stocks

 




A Beginner's Guide to Day Trading Online (2nd edition)
-By: Toni Turner
-Price: $9.48 (New)
$9.49 (Used)

Day Trading For Dummies (For Dummies (Business & Personal Finance))
-By: Ann C. Logue
-Price: $13.42 (New)
$13.64 (Used)

The Complete Guide to Day Trading: A Practical Manual From a Professional Day Trading Coach
-By: Markus Heitkoetter
-Price: $14.35 (New)
$14.34 (Used)

Day Trading the Currency Market: Technical and Fundamental Strategies To Profit from Market Swings (Wiley Trading)
-By: Kathy Lien
-Price: $43.98 (New)
$27.98 (Used)

Financial Freedom Through Electronic Day Trading
-By: Van K. Tharp, Brian June
-Price: $19.49 (New)
$16.98 (Used)

Trading Day by Day: Winning the Zero Sum Game of Futures Trading
-By: F. H. Chick Goslin
-Price: $55.95 (New)
$83.95 (Used)

 

Welcome to The Ultimate Trading Guide

 

Learn How To Day Trade Stocks Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Learn How To Day Trade Stocks. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Trading the Gap

from: Bill Morrison




There are a number of common theories and misconceptions about opening gaps and how to trade them. Trader Jack himself has always maintained that it is wise to 'mind the gap', and strongly recommends not dashing madly after a market powering away unless you REALLY know what you are doing. We therefore felt it might be useful to investigate common gap trading ideas and comment on them for our readers at www.traders101.com .

Here are the results of a study on the Nasdaq, including every gap in the last 15 years. At first glance, the Trader Jack rule 'never chase the gap' looks like a good rule - over 70% of gaps get filled on the day they occur, i.e. the the market falls back to the previous day's close before the end of the session. Also worth noting - the average size of a gap on the Naz (both long and short) is just over 1.16%. As you might expect, small gaps get filled more often than big gaps - there is 'less work to do' for the market to reverse a small gap.

Larger gaps have a tendency to stay open more than small gaps - for example, a gap that is twice as large as the average gap (2.33%) will typically remain open over 60% during the session (although they may get closed again the next day). Likewise, a gap 3 times the size of an average gap will remain open almost 65% of the time on the day. At the top of the scale, gaps that are 3.5% larger than an average gap remain unfilled almost 90% of the time on the day they occur. They may only get filled 21% of the time during the week, too!

This data tends to suggest that a reasonable gap trading strategy might involve trading against (or 'fading') small and average sized gaps, and to 'go with' a large gap. So how does one implement such a system? Let's take a closer look.

Given that we might want to consider fading a small gap, we can give a it a bit of 'room' to develop before committing to a trade - it is, after all, likely to come back. The average trader seems to prefer watching the first hour (the time when allegedly the 'silly' money comes and goes), and then deciding on a trade. Within this first hour, a small gap will often have 'settled', or even begun the process of falling back towards the previous close. Whatever the situation, a 'range' will have been defined by that first hour's action - generally the strategy then would be to go long above that range, and short below it.

With this in mind, it is helpful to consider the trading on the basis of the '4 types' of gap that are generally supposed to exist. The first of these is the 'Full Gap Up'. This happens if the opening price is greater than yesterday's high price - A big jump, in other words. Likewise, a 'Full Gap Down' is when the opening price is less than yesterday's low. A 'Partial Gap Up', on the other hand, happens when today's opening price is higher than yesterday's close, but NOT higher than yesterday's high. In the same way, a 'Partial Gap Down' is when the opening price is below yesterday's close, but NOT below yesterday's low.

These 4 gap types each have a long and short trading signal, giving us 8 gap trading strategies which are discussed in detail on www.traders101.com . All are based on a gap trading strategy in which you wait 1 hour after the market open so a trading range can be established. Trading before that time is up is possible, although it involves more risk. As always, sensible stoploss methods to minimize losses if things go wrong are mandatory! Good luck with it!

About the Author

Bill Morrison trades the Nasdaq, and writes for www.traders101.com






 



 

Learn How To Day Trade Stocks News

3 Stocks Hitting Low Notes - Motley Fool


The Money Times

3 Stocks Hitting Low Notes
Motley Fool - 5 hours ago
Join us on CAPS to learn more about these and countless other interesting stock ideas. What do the unfolding financial crisis and ongoing market volatility ...
Today's 5-Star Movers Motley Fool
3 Stocks Hitting Low Notes Motley Fool
all 16 news articles

Read more...


Dispatches From The Edge: Latin America, the Crisis, and Mr. Monroe - Berkeley Daily Planet


Dispatches From The Edge: Latin America, the Crisis, and Mr. Monroe
Berkeley Daily Planet, CA - 6 hours ago
Trade between the three is projected to top $15 billion by 2010. “Developing countries need to learn from the crisis,” says Lula da Silva, and “to construct ...

Read more...


Teva Pharmaceuticals (TEVA) asthma drug approved - BloggingStocks


MSN Money UK

Teva Pharmaceuticals (TEVA) asthma drug approved
BloggingStocks - Nov 19, 2008
So far today the stock has hit a low of $42.55 and a high of $43.78. As of 12:25, TEVA is trading at $42.84, up $0.65 (1.5%). ...
Drug maker has the right Rx StarNewsOnline.com
all 514 news articles

Read more...


Global Warming Legislation Necessary Despite Economic Downturn ... - CNSNews.com


Global Warming Legislation Necessary Despite Economic Downturn ...
CNSNews.com, VA - 13 hours ago
“As a Duke shareholder, I’m outraged they didn’t learn the last time [with Warner-Lieberman] that cap-and-trade is the death knell to their business,” he ...

Read more...


Beggars Banquet - New York Times


Beggars Banquet
New York Times, United States - 19 hours ago
Ford Motor stock was trading near $1 on Wednesday — you want fries with that? When even Mitt Romney, who famously pandered to Michigan voters this year ...

Read more...