Stock market dealing

Thanks for the guidance @Justin Passing , I appreciate the time you’ve taken to write it out.

I think that you highlight the concern that I (and probably others) have is that when you start out it is your real savings and if you lose that bit (before you’ve cleared a decent profit to the trade fear free with) then it’s game over. And you’re using your actual savings when your least experience!

I have been playing with T212 fake money, starting with 5k in the Invest fund and £50k in the CFD.

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I’m marginally up across the portfolio but would have been better if I’d not lost £3k on some energy stock that was just trending down and down.

I cant work out how/if you can short on T212, and I think I was setting the stop loss too short as I trigged a few loses within minutes of placing order only for the stock to bounce back later.

Most of my picks weren’t scientific, sometimes from alerts the app was sending me or looking at the top movers in the day. So gains were more luck than judgement, but I was doing what you mentioned previously about looking at the channel/trends and avoiding anything on a general downward trend.

I think my main issue is that I don’t have time to watch the prices or listen to the investor news channels (as I run my own business). I do like the idea of dabbling though and what you’ve suggested in your last post about doing something like that in the evening just watching the rises and falls is sensible given the time available.

I’ve got about 5k in crypto as I stuck about a grand in when bitcoin and doge coin were at their lowest…so I guess that could be considered my risk free gambling pot.

Thanks for the pointer on eTorro too, I’ll give it a try.
 
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@kingandy2nd Writing it out reinforces it so it's all good. If you had to write an instruction book, you really have to be clear what you're doing, sort of thing.
Well done for having a go on the simulator. Easy to get wins on there, then something you weren't watching takes a slug from you.
That's what you must expect if you just "try " things.
Yes, stop losses are a mixed blessing, or a necessary evil, or something in between.
There's no formula I know of for getting it right. It'll always be wrong, but it can be very wrong if you don't used the damned things.
"Trading" is easier, in that you plan the trade, and selling is part of ithe plan, and having a price where it's failed an you need to sell, is too.

Most of the time, you're looking to see what the Trend is. Get it clear that you know what a trend looks like. A trend up is higher highs and higher lows.
Loads on the net, at Investopedia and whatnot
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That's here: https://enrichmoney.in/knowledge-center-chapter/what-a-trend-in-technical-analysis.

There are various words to describe the same things. Like you could draw a Channel going up, sideways and down, on that.
The black part is called Consolidation, where buyers and sellers aren't really doing anything much, The price there is oscillating because of the positive feedback thing - people and bots buy because the price is going up which pushes the price up, then the reverse takes over.

On the blue side, you aim to buy when the price hiyts the straight line underneath - or just after it. "Just after it" is safer because you'll have see confirmation, but also reduces your gain. The Spread gets involved when the price changes direction. It often goes wide, reducing your gain again.

Once more about whether to bet with or against the trend:
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If you buy WITH, at black "Buy", and you miss the sale at Green oval, you can just wait, holding the position, which may look negative for you, until the price is above the green line again.

If you try going against the trend, as atthe black square, and you miss the sale at pink, you're bust, because the price is never going to come back for you. IT MIGHT, on the next swing, maybe 10 times the time period later. Holding on for those ten time periods is where people make big losses ig they decide it's not going to come back intheir lifetime. It's uncomfortabe to hold on all day, or overnight, because you can never be sure about anything.
[In that Microstrategy thing a couple of posts back, I was on the hump in the afternoon at say 365, then the price went down to 325. I was fearing it was going to 300, making a loss of 65 , but it came back up to 444. put "000" on the end of those numbers - getting a bit serious. I was LUCKY after that, in that it went on down. Later it WAS up again, 500+, before going down by 160.
BItcoin is trending up, (Mstr normally gets pushed by it), so I was on a fair bet that the price would come back up fairly soon. I could say I wish I waited for the 500+, but now, whaddaya know, there's reports of malaccounting at Mstr so the price is falling.]

When the price is on the "sideways Trend" that's called Ranging. That can be good, as I've shown a couple of times, but ONLY if the spread is narrow - say the thickness of the line. If It's wider, a third or half the range height, you can't trade there.

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Here endeth the lesson, next is about LEVELS but a final consideration, should you enter Long here?? It's going up, right??
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NO you wouldn't, because that's one of those long top wick candles, which is likely to be followed by a dip, and you'd be buying at the top of a rise. So 2 reasons not to. (= confluence). It might go on up, but the chance of the next candle being lower is high.


Then if you look wider timeframe:
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you can see the price has come off a LEVEL where it was Consolidating. It has just come down from the bottom of the Channel that Consolidation Range was in, so we're in a dip, right? time to buy?
You would WAIT to see if the price BROKE into that range again, or dropped in a new one. WOUld you?

Now, suppose I tell you that SMR (Small Modular Reactors) has risen 300% in the last 2 months, and if you step back, you see this:
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It's at the top of a rising channel. You would probably "get a fill" with an order to buy at 27.50, but it could carry on at the top of the rising channel.
So, what to do?? This thing looks like it's going up. 60 by Xmas??

As it's a weekend and I have a new pot to pis put some money it, I bought £1k, along with some other runners. AND I left a buy order for £3k at 27 and one at 25.5. I wouldn't be surprised if it doesn't dip much at all in the near future

Advice to you, might be to wait for a dip, which could come in a couple of days from now. Or....

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In fact I just looked at a screener, and put a bit in each of several stocks which have gone up strongly in the past 12, 4 and 1 week. We'll see. I might even get Excel out and graph it.
 
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Got your money in a BUILDING SOCIETY???
WHY??

You'll be at the rate of the grey line, Aberdeen cash, on this graph.
I'm not using that at the moment.... One month:
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Another account. this Friday.:
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(red means nothing there)
So that one needs 3 days like that to match the Bldg Soc's yearly return, which would be around 0.021% a day(250 days).
It a/c has been around those numbers for a little while now.
 
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Don't you pay swap rates on IG SB accounts? If not, great!
Don't know. For a £13 position on gold (per one dollar) I paid

20Nov24
02:57:26
Daily Financing Adjustment - FX Interest for 1 day Spot Gold £4.90
20Nov24
03:00:30
Daily Admin Fee - FX Interest for 1 day Spot Gold £0.94

I don't know how this compares to elsewhere.
 
Errrm, Spot gold is £2170
Is that £1 a point so £2170 x13 x 100 = 2821k?

From then on, I don't know what they're charging. I had a short look at IG rates. They don't explain what they mean very well.
 
I cant work out how/if you can short on T21

2 ways. In Invest and Isa you can use "negative" ETFs, They can be -1x, -3x, and variants.
Try them in the sim and if you win on one, pa yourself on the back. Thay aren't "liquid" enough, the spreads are wide.
It's a good discipline to always use LIMIT orders, but vital on leveraged anything. If you do a "market" order, you can pay 3% too much.
For Nvida it won't make any difference...
The main way to short is to use a "margin" account. Look em up. The CFD part is one of those. SHort long makes no difference,
More people apparently lose money on CFD, but it shouldn't be any different.
Trying not to get too side tracked here,

The rub with margin acounts is they'r sort of lending you money. If you leave the position open overnight, you pay interest. It's called a swap rate.
T212 and eToro's rates are very high - like credit card rates.
It's ok for a day or two though.
The leveraged things are better if you want to short longer term, but that's fairly unusual. They all have to make money somewhere. Some firm's swap rates are base rate + 3% per annum, rather than 30% or watever T212's is now.

If you DO venture into CFD, find and set "single click sahare dealing". You get a little box onthe screen where you can preset 1 or 0.001 or whatever shares, The default if you just click "buy" are horribly, ridicuously high. You can act in haste and have a disaster. You won't immediately recognise how much you're risking if it's something unusual.

From what arby says his platforms minima are high.
T212's minima are often very low
Here- buy 30 cents worth of a stock:, 0.01 x $30.
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More often that would be more. There's one I forget where it's 5 shares of a $45 stock, for example.. I often put tiny orders in so the price is on the watchlist.
To quickly see the minimum on CFD, click where that 0.01 is, then the C to make it 0, then +. That's usually the minimum. The actual figure is in "instrument details". Often it's 1 or 0.1 share.
 
Errrm, Spot gold is £2170
Is that £1 a point so £2170 x13 x 100 = 2821k?

From then on, I don't know what they're charging. I had a short look at IG rates. They don't explain what they mean very well.
No, as I say, it's calculated per dollar. So if the price goes up one dollar and you have a £13 position, you make £13. So it's as if you have invested £13*2700. Margin requirement is 5% of that.
 
More people apparently lose money on CFD, but it shouldn't be any different.
Could be true. If you invest £6000 and it goes down to £5900 you won't think too much of it. If you take out a CFD and it's showing minus £100 you might get rattled by this and decide you need to get out. In either case whatever your reasons for buying were, they probably won't have changed.
 
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