SimCast Ep. 19 – James Ferreira on Trading w/ VWAP Boulevard Indicator

In this episode, you’ll learn about James’s path to consistency as he continues to grow his account. You’ll also hear the story behind how built the VWAP boulevard indicator, and an in-depth look at how he trades using these amazing tools. We cover some recent trades and dive into the charts about midway through the interview, so be sure to watch for that!

James Ferreira and his colleagues build a VWAP boulevard indicator

Who Is James Ferreira

James Ferreira is a tattoo artist turned trader who goes by @jmftattoo on Twitter. Before getting into trading, he was making good money living in Vegas as a tattoo artist. Living it up in his 20s and 30s all changed when his son came along 10 years ago, though. Since then, James has been devoted to not only his young family, but also trading.

After diving in head long into as many strategies, channels, and chat rooms he could find, he finally settled into a role as a moderator with his mentor Zach Hurwitz at thevwap.com. Zach has been profiled on such podcasts as ChatwithTraders and is a very proficient VWAP educator and trader.

What is the VWAP boulevard indicator?

VWAP boulevard indicator

As many of you know, we’re big fans of the #vwapboulevard strategy that All Day Faders teaches on Twitter. In fact, we love the strategy so much that we wrote the ultimate guide to it. Along those lines, James and his colleagues were instrumental in building one of the first free VWAP boulevard indicators for this strategy in TradingView and ThinkorSwim.

As you’ll learn in the interview, James first took his idea to Zach. Then, with the help of Australian coder @rumpypumpydumpy, they built a very dynamic and popular script for #vwapboulevard. Since then, James has evolved his own scripts to include dynamic VWAP boulevard indicators, VWAP boulevard heat maps, and more — though most of these aren’t publicly published.

SimCast Ep. 19 – Topics and Chapters

Here are some chapters and topics to look for:

  • Intro
  • James background with coding, TheVwap.com, and Strategies – 1:00
  • From Tattooer to Trader – 8:55
  • Top takeaways from James’s mentors – 14:00
  • Backtester vs. Outcome Review – 18:45
  • Using Discord as a Journal – 20:00
  • Importance of personality and self-awareness in trading – 23:15
  • Early blow-ups and adversity – 26:50
  • Risk management and trade management – 31:00
  • $F (FORD) Trade recap screenshare using #vwapboulevard indicators- 33:19
  • Using #vwapboulevard intraday to find bag-holders – 45:20
  • #vwapboulevard heat maps – 50:00
  • Countertrend moves using vwap – 1:00:00
  • Outro – 1:08:20
The head and shoulders pattern banner

The Head and shoulders pattern is a reversal trading strategy, which can develop at the end of bullish or bearish trends. It is often referred to as an inverted head and shoulders pattern in downtrends, or simply the head and shoulders stock pattern in uptrends. In theory, they foretell the slowing momentum in either direction as the stock is unable to put in further highs or lows.

Traders like to trade head and shoulders patterns as the price targets are very predictable and the formation has an overall high success rate.

What do Head and Shoulders Chart Patterns Look Like?

The head and shoulders chart formation consists of three peaks, which develops after a strong bullish trend. The first and last peak are approximately the same height and are classified as the shoulders.

The second peak is the highest of the three and is classified as the head of the pattern.

Head and shoulders charts represent the transfer of power from the bulls to the bears in a topping pattern. In essence, it is a distribution pattern. Bulls who were buying the breakout (head), provided the liquidity for larger players to sell into, thus bringing the stock back down.

Please see the below illustration of a head and shoulders pattern top:

head and shoulders topping pattern
Head and Shoulders Top

What Do Inverse Head and Shoulders Chart Patterns Look Like?

Conversely, the inverted head and shoulders pattern is the head and shoulders bottom.

Instead of peaks, there are troughs. This reversal pattern develops after an extensive bearish trend and represents the transfer of control from bears to the bulls. Like the topping pattern, here bulls are using the breakdown as an opportunity to go long at lower prices. It could also give longer term bears the liquidity to cover their positions.

Below is an illustration of a head and shoulders bottom:

head and shoulders bottom
Head and Shoulders Bottom

This is an outline of the inverse head and shoulders pattern. As you see, it is the mirror image of the head and shoulders topping pattern.

Identifying the Neckline in a Head and Shoulders Pattern

Every technical chart pattern has a trigger line, which provides confirmation for entering or exiting a trade.

For the head and shoulders pattern, the trade signal is called the neckline.

When you think about it, this name makes sense, because the neckline is directly beneath the head and shoulders.  Get it?

When we identify the pattern on the chart, the first thing we should do is to draw the neckline.

So, how do we draw the neckline?

The proper way to set up your neckline is to connect the two peaks or troughs (depending on if it’s a top or bottom). Here’s an example with $CEI:

$CEI head and shoulders pattner example
$CEI head and shoulders pattern example

Please note the neckline isn’t always flat.  If the peak or trough values are slightly different, then the neckline could have a slope.

We’ve tried to give you two examples of an early entry “Neckline A” and a later “Neckline B”. Both would work. It will depend on you and your style to outcome test head and shoulders chart patterns for the best entry.

What do Head and Shoulders Stock Patterns Foretell?

To determine the size of the formation, you should first set up the neckline as we just discussed.

Then, you take the mid-point of the neckline and draw a vertical line connecting the mid-point of the neckline to the top of the head. The distance between the neckline mid-point and the head is the distance we expect the stock to run after breaking through the neckline.

Please note, measuring price targets for head and shoulders and inverted head and shoulders will mirror each other. Again, the only difference is the formations are inverted.

How to Trade a Head and Shoulders Chart

When should you open a position?

When you identify the formation, you should start looking for the signal you need in order to enter the market. This signal is the moment when the price breaks through the neckline, for all intents and purposes.

When the neckline is broken, you should open a short position for head and shoulders tops and a long position for head and shoulders bottoms.

Granted, this is the old-school way to trade the pattern. Educators like Gil Morales teaches you to short into the pops on the right shoulder. He likes to find weaknesses into the overhead moving averages for good risk/reward.

If interested, he has a great book on short selling called Short-Selling with the O’Neil Disciples: Turn to the Dark Side of Trading.

Where should you place stop-loss orders?

This is a tricky question as traders’ opinions are pretty controversial regarding stop loss placement for the pattern.

Some traders claim that the stop loss should be loose and placed just above the head of the pattern.

A more conservative approach used by traders is to place the stop loss beyond the shoulder peak/trough.

We prefer placing the stop loss above the shoulder, as placing the stop above the head provides a 1:1 risk reward ratio. This isn’t very favorable odds.

When should you collect profits – Reverse Head and Shoulders Pattern Example 1

Again, the rule of thumb for this pattern is to determine the price target based on the depth of the pattern.

If this sounds confusing to you, have a look at the image below:

Price Target for Head and shoulders pattern
Price Target

This is a classic inverted head and shoulders scenario. This is the 30-minute chart of Apple. First, we have a bearish market followed by the creation of an inverted head and shoulders formation.

You can see the neckline – the brown line.  Once the neckline is broken to the upside, we were able to set our price target based on the depth of the neckline to the trough of the head, which is represented with the black arrow.

After we establish our long position, we place our stop loss below the last shoulder as shown in the image.

After 24 hours, our minimum target is reached and we exit the position after the first bearish candle circled in green.

This inverted head and shoulders formation brings us a profit of $2.20 per share with the Apple equity.

While we exited this position near the target, you should not exit your position if the price continues to move in your favor.

Reverse Head and Shoulders Target Example 2

Having fun? Let’s go through another example.

Reverse head and shoulders Price target example 2
Price Target

This is the 30-minute chart of Facebook.

After a strong downtrend, an reverse head and shoulders pattern develops. Again, we identify the neckline by drawing a brown line across the shoulders.

We open a long position with the first candle that closes above the brown neckline. Meanwhile, we establish our minimum target, which is illustrated with the black arrow.

After a few days, the price reaches our minimum target, but we stay with our long position until our bearish signal develops. For more information on bearish candlestick patterns as entry and exit signals, visit our guide to candlesticks.

A few hours later, a hanging man develops and we close our long position.   From this long position, we were able to generate profits of ~ $4.00 per share.

When does the Head and Shoulders Pattern Fail

Although head and shoulders are considered one of the most reliable chart patterns for equity trading, like any other chart technique – it can fail.

Sometimes, we will receive our confirmation signal and the price does not reach our minimum target.

In other cases, the price will confirm the formation by breaking the neckline, and we will see absolutely no movement in our favor. These cases are not rare at all.

head and shoulders pattern failure
Pattern Failure

This is the 60-minute chart of Toronto-Dominion Bank. After a steady downtrend, an inverted head and shoulders formation develops.

We establish the neckline, price target, and stop loss, which are best practices for identifying the formation.

Unfortunately, after opening a long position, TD Bank begins to retreat below the neckline and ultimately trips our stop-loss order.

From this position, we accumulated a loss of ~52 cents ($0.52) per share. Although all the symptoms of an effective pattern are there, things didn’t work out.

This is why it is important to respect your stops!

Day Trading Head and Shoulders Tops

The first thing to consider when day trading this pattern is that it requires time. Unless you are on sub-minute charts or tick charts, you will likely need two days worth of bars or an early afternoon set up for the formation to fully develop.

Like any other trading setup, you will need more than just the chart pattern to be a success. Some of these items include proper money management and a firm understanding of risk on each trade.

Back to an intraday example, check out this head and shoulders chart of RPM.

Intraday Top on RPM
Intraday Chart Example

You can see the setup is the same as all the other charts previously discussed, even though the chart is on a 5-minute time frame.

The key point, again, is that you will need to let the trade setup. It’s not like an opening range breakout with 4 or 6 candles after a major gap. It takes time.

This pattern requires you to let the trade come to you, which takes extreme patience. The positive is that the reward from the trade is significant because the “cause” built up before the move creates a large “effect,” typically. There are many traders on both sides of the trade placing real money on the line.

The key is, after the break of the neckline, managing the trade properly. This means placing your stop above the recent peak or trough point. Also, it means adding to the position as it goes in your favor, all while managing a core position.

Key Summary Points on Head and Shoulders Chart Patterns

  • Head and shoulders tops and bottoms are reversal chart patterns.
  • It is one of the most reliable technical formations.
  • Inverted head and shoulders can reverse a bearish trend to bullish.
  • You will need to identify the formation, neckline, and stop loss levels.
  • Open a position when the price breaks through the neckline.
  • Advanced/Early entries can be taken on pops into the moving averages on the right shoulder
  • Place a stop loss order on the edge of the last shoulder.
  • The price target for the formation is equal to the depth of the neckline to the head of the formation.
  • When the price target is met, stay with the position until a contrary signal develops.
  • The pattern can fail, so don’t get too sure of yourself.
  • Use a global news source to understand the financial impacts outside of your market which can impact the trade.

How Can TradingSim Help

As with any strategy, we never recommend putting your money to work without testing the setup first. Ideally, you’ll want a set of as many simulated trades as possible in order to know your probability for success.

In other words, don’t take our word for it. Jump in the sim, scan for reversals both long and short, and track them in the analytics page. This way, you’ll know ahead of time what your realistic outcome expectancy can be.

Along the way, be sure to study which areas provide the best points of entry for your specific head and shoulders pattern strategy.

Here’s to good fills!

Finding the Most Active Stocks to Day Trade [Video]

 

There are thousands of stocks you can trade on any given day. For that reason, picking the most active stocks each day can help you narrow your universe of ideas.

The potential number of trade opportunities can feel overwhelming to the untrained eye. For example, do you pick popular stocks like Apple or Google to trade? Or, do you just play IPOs and shoot for a quick flip based on the hype? All of these questions have to be fleshed out as a part of your daily trading plan.

Each day, it should be your goal of scanning the market for the best “stock movers today.” Your goal is not only finding stocks that best fit your trading methodology, but which are also the biggest market movers. The task is not as simple as just having a list of high volume stocks that you can trade every day and make boatloads of money.

Learning how to find the best stocks to day trade requires work and quite a bit of research on your part. In this article, we’ll illustrate 7 tips and tricks you can use to find the most active stocks to day trade, the biggest pre market movers, and the highest volume stock each day.

Best Stocks to Day Trade

Start Your Day Early Searching Pre-Market Gainers

Regardless of which approach best fits your day trading style, the one thing required for each selection process is that you must get an early start to the trading day.

Gone are the days where you can arrive at 9:15 am, log on to your broker, and start placing trades. The market is getting faster and faster with the increased trading volume from hedge funds.  At a minimum, you should start your prep work at 8 am market time.

This will provide you enough time to conduct your morning research and configure your monitors with the stocks you are actively tracking for the day. As part of this process, you will want to pay close attention to the pre-market gainers that are populating your scans. These are usually the best day trading stocks.

#1   Find the Best Stocks to Day Trade with Biggest Pre-market Movers

For those of you that have been trading for some period of time, you will know that the pre-market is one of the street’s favorite ways to take advantage of you.[1] A stock could be up 6% in the pre-market only to open up 2% at 9:30 am. The reason for the large price swing is due to the thin volume that can carry a stock in either direction outside of the regular trading session.

We recommend starting your scans around 8:00 am sharp, well before the opening bell.  This gives you a full hour and a half before the market opens to conduct your research. Along those lines, here is a list of what you want to look for when scanning for the best stock movers “today”.

  • Stocks gapping at least 2-5%. The gap needs to be healthy. However, since 2020 and the pandemic, pre-market stock movers are gapping higher and higher
  • Volume needs to be somewhat heavy.  If you see a stock up 20% on 200 shares, then look the other way. Ideally, Relative Volume should be well over 100%
  • Once you see a stock that is up on decent volume, you’ll want to check the news and whether or not there is any dilution risk.
  • Make sure you review the broader value of the futures market for the major indices (Dow, NASDAQ and S&P).  While breakouts can move independently of the market, it’s always a good idea to go in the direction of the broad market.

Setting Up Your Scans for Today’s Biggest Premarket Movers

Your trading platform should provide you with the pre-market movers; however, if the scans are not thorough enough, below is a list of resources:

  1. NASDAQ pre-market values
  2. Stock Market Analysis – list the pre-market movers every morning
  3. Stock Market Watch – provides top gainers and losers but also displays the pre-market value of the major indices.

There are other high powered scanners out there, but to be honest, all you really need is a method to see the top gainers and losers. However, here at TradingSim, we offer a simplified scan filtering engine that will help empower your training experience. There’s no better way to get your feet wet finding the biggest premarket stock movers.

TradingSim Scanner Tutorial

The constant need for more information throughout the day will likely lead to overtrading or too much confidence.

Not to mention, some of these scanners can get pretty costly. You need to prove you are able to make money with the most basic of scans before scaling up to the pricier options.

Examples of these pricier scanning options are Trade Ideas and Finviz. What these sites lack in design they more than make up for in their ability to provide you with more scans than you can ever dream of needing.

Choosing the Best Penny Stocks to Trade?

Now that we have covered the more conservative point of view for pre-market trading, let’s delve into the wilder side of trading – low float stocks.

Low float stocks are not for everyone as the price moves are significant. [2] These low float stocks are likely penny stocks that trade under $5 dollars. Since the covid crash of 2020, these penny stocks have become much more popular and liquid. Some of them may reach into the 100s of millions of shares traded. However, they can be risky.

Please note, if you go down this path, do not use more than 5% or 10% of your bankroll on each trade. This is more of a game where you play the pop, but you are not making a long-term investment. Odds are that these stocks are priced cheaply for a reason and will eventually drop quickly.

For an example, check out our article on the 1-3pm Bloodbath Setup. It’s a great way to play penny stock movers to the short side.

Find a Clean Pattern with the Highest Volume Stocks Pre-Market

As we mentioned earlier, you want to avoid charts that have low volume in the morning. How do you know you are dealing with a chart with low volume? Just check out the image below.

Thin Volume
Thin Volume

Basically, if you feel like you are looking at stars in the midnight sky, the volume is too thin. When we say stars, we’re not talking about candlesticks – we mean literal dashes on the charts.

The pattern you trade is solely up to you. Some of you may like ascending triangles, while others may look for red to green setups (meaning the stock starts lower but later exceeds the morning highs).

Scanning for the Biggest High Float Market Movers Each Day

If you’re not interested in low float penny stocks, you’ll want to find the highest volume stocks with high float. Why high float?

These are the stocks that can safeguard your investment with a more certain move in the morning.

On average, you’ll find between 2 and 5 stocks that have both the volume and the necessary float requirements to be a real market mover.

The key for you is only trading one or two of these setups per day.

Running your scans, you should see a list of stocks like the one below:

Pre-market Movers
Pre Market Movers

As you can see, there are a few stocks on both the long and short side that are likely good candidates for an opening range breakout or breakdown trade.

Now that we have covered pre-market movers at length, let’s shift our focus back to other ways of identifying great day trading opportunities using the most active stocks of the day.

#2 Finding the Highest Volume Stocks Today

Assuming you have hundreds of thousands of dollars at your disposal you will need a stock with enough volume to allow you to quickly enter and exit the trade with ease. Everyone’s criteria may differ, but our personal minimum is about 40,000 shares per 5-minute bar.

This, of course, depends on the price of the stock and the float. Perhaps you don’t have a large account. If not, be sure to check out our small account strategy.

If you have a brokerage account, your respective firm should have a most active stocks list. This is a good place to start, but will only contain the top 20 or so stocks. You’ll need a scan that is a little broader and provides you with trading opportunities that are not being tracked by every investor. You may want to also find stocks that are rising on high volume relative to their average volume.

For example, if a stock normally trades 2 million shares a day but has 5 million shares traded before 10am, this is something of note. You may be saying to yourself, well these will show up in the most popular stocks in my trading platform. Unfortunately, this is not always the case. Again, your brokerage platform may only return a maximum number of stocks (i.e. top 10, 20).

If your trading platform does not provide you with a robust screener for the highest volume stocks, below are some great resources:

  1. Unusual Volume provided by Yahoo Finance. [3]
  2. Bar Chart provides a list of over 200 symbols [4]
  3. The Street provides not only the high volume stocks but also has a scan for stocks trading under $5 for all you penny stock lovers out there [5]

#3 Develop your Own Watchlist for Daily Market Movers

You will need to develop your own list from stocks you follow on a daily basis.  Again, due to a large number of stocks on the exchanges, it’s best to focus on specific sectors.  Below is a list of popular ones:

  • Banking
  • Precious Metals
  • Semiconductor
  • Automotive
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Retail
  • Internet

Once you have one or two sectors you would like to follow, begin to track the movement of the top issues. Give yourself a few months of consistently watching the stocks and the sectors in terms of their price movements.

As a follower of the Richard Wyckoff method, you’ll learn that each sector and stock will have an ‘operator’ that is in control of the market action. This operator is the collective investors or market makers with the most money in the stock; therefore, they have a controlling interest. 

Using Gold as an Example

Let’s take an example from the ’08 market.

Every day like clockwork stocks Royal Gold (RGLD) and Golden Star Resources (GSS) would have sharp reversals at 10 AM.  A system of buying or selling short on breakouts of the morning’s trading range would fail consistently with these precious metal stocks.

While experience would’ve taught you to avoid this particular sector for 6 months, you could use the watch and learn approach to understand how a particular market moves in order to gain an edge over other traders.

The one challenge with building a list is limiting the number of stocks you watch within 1 or 2 sectors down to the biggest market movers. You are manually tracking these stocks and building a sense of touch for how they trade. At most, you should only track 10 stocks per sector, so this gives you a maximum of 20 stocks you can follow at any one point.

This should give you a feel for not only the stocks in the sector, but if they are real stock movers, and whether or not they fit your strategy.

#4 Keep Up with Historical Market Movers

Instead of looking to someone else for advice on what the best stocks to day trade are, how about looking at your own trade performance. There is at least one stock you trade on a regular basis for one reason or another.

Funny thing is you will not be able to explain why you keep gravitating to that particular security. Call it your soul mate or just your stock of choice. Your comfort level with the stock will make you feel like you “own” its movements.

You can move in and out of the stock with ease and generally make a profitable trade on each attempt.

For me, I couldn’t get enough of Baidu Incorporated (BIDU).  For all of you fans of the show Scandal, she was my Olivia.  I would track BIDU every day even if she wasn’t moving much.  For some reason, I was able to predict her movements and never found myself fighting the trade.

So, look back over your trade history. Is there one stock market mover that keeps popping up on your list of trades?

#5 Social Media Stock Movers and Pumpers

This is a more recent technique for scanning the market. It can be a bit tricky, however. The reason for this is that searching social media sites or reading news events might positively or negatively impact your view on a stock.  

We recommend basing your trade decisions solely on the price and volume action of the stock. That being said, there may be some underlying sentiment on social media that is worth knowing.

Play StockTwits

StockTwits streams the hopes and random thoughts of investors for many securities.  They even have a market sentiment factor which displays at the top of each wall for the respective stock.  

In terms of which stocks most active stocks to day trade, if you visit the homepage you will see a list of stocks across the top which are trending.

These are stocks that members are actively discussing as Stocktwits plays. You will quickly notice that these are the stocks in the news. Nonetheless, there are times when members are discussing a move in a stock during the middle of the day before a news publication is able to produce an article.

Play Stocktwits for most active stocks
Play Stocktwits for most active stocks

The best method for using StockTwits without a doubt goes back to the list of pre-market movers. You can, of course, look at the news event which is pushing the stock higher or read the latest press release from the company, but StockTwits allows you to get a real pulse of the market.

You can actually use StockTwits as a method to validate exactly how much interest there is in the stock.

If you see a stock up 10% but with only two tweets, it’s likely not in play.

However, if you can find the stock that is up on heavy volume and the board for the respective security on StockTwits is very active, you likely have a stock in play.

Remember, it’s not about the level of bullishness or bearishness on the board – all you care about is if people are talking about the stock you have an eye on.

Similar to StockTwits but with a twist, is the popular sentiment lists being viewed on swaggystocks.com. Swaggystocks essentially crawls many of the popular social media outlets like Twitter, WallStreetBets, Reddit, and more. They compile the most mentioned stocks into cute little charts that tell you what’s trending.

swaggystocks.com social media sentiment indicator for most active stocks
swaggystocks.com social media sentiment lists

The cool thing about swaggystocks.com is that they offer many different social sentiment lists that are updated frequently throughout the day. What this can do for the retail trader is give insight into what stocks are most active. You might find a potential market mover or high volume stock from this list.

Of course, as with any stock in play, you want to have a setup and a trade plan. Don’t be a bag holder just because AMC is being mentioned a lot on Twitter. Stick to your edge.

TradingSim Historical Market Movers Scanner

TradingSim’s market movers scan provides a list of the top 50 losers and gainers for every session in the market going back 3 years. For most brokers, they don’t keep track of this data. To that end, you’ll have a tough time identifying which stocks were trending on a given day in the past.

TradingSim Market Movers Pane
TradingSim Market Movers Pane

Market movers inside TradingSim will allow you to pick a random day 6 months in the past and actually see what the most active stocks were for that day. Just as you would research and track the hot stocks for each morning, market movers automatically provides this function for you on historical days. This way, you can just focus on practicing day trading.

#6 Monitor the Earnings Calendar for Potential Active Stocks

One event that is sure to bring about increased volatility is the reporting of earnings. This occurs quarterly throughout the year.

Be sure to keep track of who is on deck for the week. That way, you can start to monitor how the stock is trading going into the earnings announcement.

To be clear, we are NOT advocating you place a trade before the earnings are reported, because this is another form of gambling. You will, however, want to know who are the upcoming market movers and most active stocks for that day, so you can add them to your watch list.  

This will reduce the amount of research required prior to the market open.  Below is a list of sites that publish earnings calendars:

#7 Focus on One or Two Stocks from Your Most Active Stocks List

Focusing on one or two securities is all about keeping it simple.  In all of the above examples, you would need to scan, watch, and react quickly on a daily basis to a large number of issues.

If this is something that you feel is too much and you want to become a master of something simple, then look to trade the same one or two issues every day. Or, at a miminum, choose only a few of the highest volume gainers or most active stocks each day. 

Selecting a Stock to Trade from Your Most Active Stocks List

When selecting a stock to trade, you have two approaches: (1) select the most popular stock or (2) pick your favorite stock based on your past trading performance.  #2 will largely depend on your own trading preferences, so we’ll cover a few top stocks for day trading:

  • AAPL (Apple) – high volume and great price action.  The popularity of the company has transferred over to the stock’s popularity in the trading community
  • S&P 500 Spiders (SPY) – While this is not a stock but an ETF that follows the S&P index, the volume is huge and provides the means for you to trade the index without trading futures
  • QQQ – formerly known as the QQQQ has been a fan favorite of active traders for over a decade
  • TSLA (Tesla Motors, Inc.) – if you like volatility, the stock moves as fast as its cars
  • NFLX (Netflix) – the CEO is willing to make bold decisions, this has translated into significant price swings in the stock
  • FB (Facebook) – there are few stocks that have polarized traders as much as Facebook

It’s safe to say we are a little biased towards the NASDAQ when it comes to day trading.  The NASDAQ’s ability in the late 90’s to facilitate order flow has forever stamped them as the preferred index for active traders. You’ll typically never fall short of a daily market mover or high volume stock on the NASDAQ.

Below are the benefits of trading one or two stocks:

  • Learn the trading pattern and personality of the stock
  • Identify the technical indicators best suited for the security
  • Less stress
  • Less work to do before and after the market close

In Summary

There are multiple ways to select the best stocks for you to day trade.  Remember, trading is a journey, so don’t try to figure it all out in one day.  Just make sure your scan provides you the means to trade high volume stocks with a sound system that consistently makes you money.

If you do decide to create custom scans, you will want to focus on the following key areas:

  • high volume stocks
  • gappers
  • pre-market movers
  • red to green and green to red moves
  • consecutive number of red or green candles
  • biggest stock gainers and losers

Results for these 6 scans will provide you more than enough as a new trader.

We hope you found this article to be helpful in your quest to find the most active stocks to day trade.  If you would like to see how we can help you further, come over to Tradingsim.com and give our market movers a shot. We’re sure you’ll find our top stock mover tips useful.  

Here’s to good fills!


Photo Sources

Stock Ticker – francisco.j.gonzalez

External References

  1. Cramer, Jim. (2019). Don’t Mess Around with Pre-Market Trading During Earnings Season. CNBC
  2. Low Float Stocks. lowfloat.com
  3. Most Active Stocks. yahoo.com
  4. All US Exchanges Volume Leaders. barchart.com
  5. Most Actives. thestreet.com

Mas is a day trader from Germany who loves to trade overextended gappers very early in the morning. Starting out almost a decade ago, it took him at least 5 years to really reach consistency. In this SimCast episode, Mas shares with us the adversity he faced and how he found the consistency he wanted. Be sure to give him a follow on Twitter as MasTrades.

Mas’s Early Adversity

In the early days, Mas shares with us how he started out blowing accounts in Forex. After reading a few books, and checking out Tim Sykes, he found success with one penny stock that took him up to $200k in profits on a single trade. However, as fate would have it, he HODLed a little too long, and rode it all the way back down.

Mas admits that pain and experience have been the best teachers for him. Those early experiences only drove him to succeed that much harder. Despite having to move in with his parents, he knew it was only a matter of time before he achieved success.

trading is pain

Finally Finding Consistency w/ 4am Gappers

Mas admits that it wasn’t until he took about 6 months off from trading to backtest a certain strategy that he found the success he wanted. He noticed a strategy centered around super-extended pre-market gappers. After screenshotting and studying hundreds of these charts, he found the confidence he needed to focus on this edge.

Mas's premarket gap strategy
Mas’s premarket gap strategy

During the interview, we get a sneak peak at some of Mas’s best trades. Not only that, but we get a peak at what he does when trades go against him, how he manages risk, and the spreadsheets he tracks everything with.

Mas is a huge advocate of discovering your own strategy. Although he finds benefit from chat rooms and other educational websites, it wasn’t until he tested his own strategies that he found consistency.

Mas Trades Chapters and Topics

  • Intro – 0:25
  • Mas’s Background in Trading from 2012 – 4:04
  • Forex Blowups – 7:08
  • The $200k Ride – 9:24
  • Quitting the investment banking job – 11:30
  • Pushing through pain and inconsistency – 15:20
  • Importance of Backtesting 20:20
  • Mas’s Trade Recaps 23:29
  • Adjusting Risk – 28:30
  • Covering based on data – 30:00
  • WAFU stops and R/R- 36:00
  • Using Evernote for Pattern Rec – 42:00
  • The Long Side of Mas – 43:45
  • Backtesting variables – 46:10
  • Mas’s P/L curve – 49:20
  • Big loss in 2021 – 50:34
  • Tracking discipline – 55:30
  • Profit goals – 1:08:00

So you want to be a day trader? You want to make that fast money? We get it. Who wouldn’t, right? Well, before you jump in head first and start pushing buttons, give us a bit of your time to discuss everything you need to know, first, in this beginner’s guide to day trading.

Day Trading 101

The Lure of Day Trading for Beginners

Success theatre has made a big impact on the lure of the average Joe into day trading in recent years. The constant barrage of juicy wins being shared on Twitter and YouTube these days make it sooo tantalizing. After all, if Jimmy Guru could go from barista to baron in just a few short months, surely he can teach you how to as well?

All kudos to Jimmy Guru, but the reality of day trading is that it’s very difficult to reach a high level of success. It’s then even harder to maintain that level of success

Nonetheless, we are in the business of helping traders reach that success, so don’t get the wrong picture. We believe it is attainable. And, for the right person, we believe it is worthwhile.

That being said, our goal in this beginner’s guide to day trading is to paint a realistic picture for you, rather than the pomp and glamour you’ve been exposed to. Along the way, we’ll give you some valuable insights into what to expect, what you should know, and what you should avoid.

What Is Day Trading?

Day trading is simply the buying and selling of a security, asset, or commodity in the same day. Holding positions overnight is what we call swing trading, and that’s a whole other discussion.

Simply put, if you open a trade in the market, then you close it the same day, you’ve made a “day” trade.

This can apply to stocks, currencies (forex), futures, crypto, or anything else that’s tradable on the markets. It doesn’t really matter. 

How Much Do Day Traders Make?

This is a bit difficult to say. Honestly, most day traders don’t make money…they lose money. However, professional traders, we have written a great article that outlines a typical day traders salary here.

Online, you’ll be quick to find many YouTube videos and gurus who’ve made millions. Their results are not typical, and can be difficult to replicate. In fact, many of these gurus are suspect regarding their trading practices, knowing they have so many followers who may buy a stock based simply upon their recommendation.

All in all, a great way to think about this is to see how little you need to make each day in order to meet your financial needs. Here is a great tweet from a market veteran on how little it takes to make a living, if you’re consistent:

Along those lines, we don’t recommend focusing on how much you can make, but on your process. We’ve done a few great interviews with guys who’ve gone from $1500 to almost a million in a short time. Be sure to check those out on the SimCast!

What Does It Cost To Day Trade?

Aside from the risks of losing money, you can day trade nowadays for practically free. Most brokers will offer free trading. However, not all brokers are created equally.

If you’re planning on day trading with precision and larger share size, you will eventually want a quality platform.

The drawbacks to having a quality platform, which doesn’t sell your order flow, is that you will pay commissions and fees.

There are a few different ways that this can be calculated depending on the broker:

Per-Trade Commissions in Day Trading

Per-trade commissions are usually calculated for low volume traders. Typically, the per-trade commission standard is around $5-$7 dollars per trade.

So, think about it this way. If you place 20 trades in a single day, you’ve racked up around $50 or so in commissions. 

Obviously, for small accounts, this can add up quickly. For that reason, you want to either limit the amount of trades you make, or have enough starting capital to support these costs.

Per-Share Commissions in Day Trading

Usually, the per-share commission structure is applied to traders with larger accounts and higher frequency trades. The rate can be as low as $0.002 per share. Most brokerages will have a tier system depending on the amount of shares you trade. 

The more you trade, the lower your per share commission size, typically. As you can see from doing simple math, it would take 1000 shares to add up to a $2 commission.

In addition to commissions, there are ECN fees, and other items to consider. Once you become more proficient at trading, you can even get rebates depending on how you route your orders.

Why Day Trading Is Attractive

Unlike swing trading or long-term investing, day trading can provide opportunities to make high percentage gains in a very short amount of time. 

Think about it this way. If a stock has the ability to move 20% in a single day, would you like to capitalize on that opportunity? Or, would you rather wait days, weeks, or even months for a stock to reach 20% in gains? 

Therein lies the temptation.

Everyday in the market, there is usually an opportunity for a stock to make a big move. Seasoned day traders know how to anticipate these moves based upon volatility and momentum. Add some amount of leverage (margin) into the mix and you have a recipe to either increase your account exponentially in a short time, or lose it all.

Sounds a lot like gambling doesn’t it? Well, we’ll discuss that next.

Is Day Trading Gambling?

In short, it all depends. Day trading, or any other trading for that matter, when done properly, is a game of probabilities. Most new traders don’t understand this, no matter how many times you tell them.

To new traders who are itching to make millions — the faster you can get there, the better. Unfortunately, this leads to gambling. 

Irresponsible gambling is throwing a bet on something with no idea what your outcomes may be for success. Your “odds,” so-to-speak. When you don’t know your odds, you’re at the mercy of happenstance. Who knows where the chips may fall, right?

So it is with trading. If you trust a guru with your money to tell you what is going to work and what isn’t, how did that guru earn your trust? Did he/she provide the probabilities of a successful outcome with you? 

If not, what are you trusting in? 

Likewise, if you take a trade based on a hunch, or “to see what happens,” you’re essentially gambling. You might as well be in Vegas.

Gambling vs Probable Outcomes

The difference between blindly gambling and successful trading comes through a deep understanding of your probable outcomes. Using the example above, if we throw a bet on something we know has a 75% chance of success, we are no longer gambling. 

The trick is figuring out what variables and patterns play out in the markets, time and again, in order to find these outcomes. Once you do, you are armed with an edge – a strategy. The rest is simply monitoring your position size and growing your account over time by keeping your risk in tact.

Discovering Your Edge Before You Start Day Trading

To avoid gambling your hard-earned money or life savings away, this may be the most important aspect of your budding career in trading — discovering your edge

Lessons from Jesse Livermore

There is a famous trader that you may or may not have heard of by now named Jesse Livermore. In a book that profiles his life, he says the following:

“The game taught me the game.”

The Life & Death of Jesse Lauriston Livermore - Beyond Debt
Bucket Shops – Photo taken from The Life & Death of Jesse Lauriston Livermore – Beyond Debt

Livermore grew up working in what were called bucket shops. They were local trading rooms where you could place bets on the market. Back then you were basically all in. Every trade was all or nothing.

Having worked there for so long, Livermore began to see patterns play out in the prices of stocks as they were printed on the “tape.” Before long, he began betting on these patterns, and winning handsomely.

Observe Before You Bet, Look Before You Leap

The reason we mention that story is twofold:

  1. If you spend enough time observing the markets, you’ll discover an exploitable pattern that can make you a handsome living.
  2. Skip this integral part of your journey, and you’ll spend a lot of long, hard years suffering set back after set back.

Observation and discovery are the keys to your success. We believe it so much that we created a niche market discovery tool that allows you to replay the entire market for up to three years.

Ponder this for a moment: 

Let’s assume you’re a soldier and you have a mission to accomplish. Would you rather jump out of an airplane into enemy territory with no prior knowledge of the terrain, the enemy, the target, the climate, or the language; or, would you rather train for a few months on what the enemy looks like, the compound where he may be hiding, how many guards he has, the terrain you’ll have to traverse, the language of the people, etc.?

In which scenario will you be more successful? Which one is more of a gamble?

Day trading is not a safe market for an uneducated trader to put his money. It’s dangerous. Literally speaking, 94% of traders lose money in the market over time. Let that sink in. 

How to Find a Strategy for Day Trading

All that being said, there are a few ways to go about discovering an edge for day trading. Like we just mentioned, you can observe enough market action until you see a repeatable pattern. Conversely, you can study a guru who has published his/her own strategies.

We are big proponents of as much original observation as possible. However, we also believe that the learning curve can be drastically reduced through quality and trustworthy education, like good podcasts for example!

In the end, though, your “edge” needs to be yours, no matter what bits and pieces you learn from here or there.

3 steps to find your edge as a beginning day trader

Step 1 for Discovering Your Edge in Day Trading: Patterns

Look for cookie-cutter patterns. You know, the flags, the wedges, the pennants, the cups with handles, the head and shoulders, the abcds, etc. Maybe you want to trade with the trend, perhaps you find reversals are more lucrative. 

You should also study candlestick patterns. We have a great guide for these.

Regardless of the pattern, the same ones that have been documented for years and years still play out in the market every single day.

Along these lines, start observing the biggest moves in the shortest amount of time. What happens when stocks gap up or down on large volume? Can you find predictable volatility in order to exploit a large intraday move based on what you find?

At the end of the day, the goal of a day trader is to make the most amount of money in the shortest amount of time, all while managing risk. In order to do this, you must find the largest, yet most predictable, price swings intraday. That’s it. 

Find enough of these, and you’re well on your way. We’ll discuss a few strategies in a moment.

Step 2 for Discovering Your Edge in Day Trading: Picking a Side

Once you find a pattern, pick a side. In the beginning, it will help you focus by choosing the long side or the short side. The goal here is to become consistent. It doesn’t mean you’ll stay a bull forever, or a bear forever. 

To a beginning trader, flipping your position here and there and then back again can be utterly confusing and confounding. Therefore, pick a side. If you see a pattern of low priced stocks gapping up and then failing, maybe shorting is better for you.

To the contrary, if you’re a more optimistic personality, perhaps you like the long side. Either way, it’s best to pick a side in the beginning, then study it until you’ve mastered it. You can always add strategies further down the road.

To that point, pick a side that fits your personality.

Step 3 for Discovering Your Edge in Day Trading: Backtesting/Outcome Testing

Like we said earlier, you’re only as good as your known probable outcomes in the market. 

As the late Mark Douglas once said, “anything can happen” in the market. Day trading is often risky and is never certain. There is no edge that will have a 100% win rate, ever. If there were, we’d all be rich.

Understand that losses will be a part of your experience more often than not. Unless you can embrace this, your odds for success are slim. It all boils down to testing your outcome for a specific strategy.

For example, if you know that stocks with a float size of less than 20 million that gap X% on Y million shares of volume have a Z chance of breaking down after 10am in the market and will close lower than they opened on the day 70% of the time, then you can place your bet knowing your probable outcomes. 

30% of the time you’ll be wrong. Then it becomes a matter of managing your position size each time.

This is just one example, but there are myriad examples like this. The bottom line: test the pattern you see with as much data as you can and with as many examples as you can.

Then, narrow down your criteria for entry, rules for trade management, and criteria for exiting the trade.

This is where true confidence comes from in trading. Don’t take our word for it, take Qullamaggie’s word for it.

The Importance of Simulation and Paper Trading

Paper Trading Apps for Day Traders

Simulation plays a huge role in day trading, mainly because it allows you to backtest and outcome test much faster. Trading live each day will take you many years to accumulate the amount of chart/screen time necessary to build pattern recognition in your mind.

Not only do you want to rely on your data, but you also want to rely on your “chart eye.” Your chart eye becomes a necessary component to your trading, unless you are a systematic/algorithmic trader.

Most traders are not algos. They are discretionary. However, as discretionary as many traders may seem, the repertoire of patterns they have become accustomed to essentially becomes systematic. 

You learn what qualities you need to see in volume and price action before you put on a trade, for example.

With paper trading, time is condensed. You can trade whenever you want, testing as many strategies as you want, on as many tickers as you want. And if the platform is complete, you’ll be able to track your strategies in an analytics page, like we provide here at TradingSim.

Don’t listen to the naysayers who will tell you that paper trading doesn’t prepare you emotionally for the real environment. The most successful traders in the world will tell you differently. We’ve already debunked this myth with the most prolific trading psychologist in the world.

It’s all about discovering your probabilities. That is what builds confidence.

The Pattern Day Trading Rule and What It Means for You

Pattern Day Trading Rule

When getting started in day trading, a lot of your success may actually depend upon whether or not you’re affected by the Pattern Day Trading rule (PDT). This rule limits the amount of day trades you can make in a week if your account is below $25,000. 

On a margin account, you’re only allowed 3 day trades in a 5 day period. So, if you make 3 day trades in one day, you’ll have to wait 5 days to make another.

We discuss ways around this and the potential for international brokerages to free up your available trades, but you need to understand how this can affect your performance.

  1. You’ll be more inclined to hold losing trades because you won’t want to burn a day trade.
  2. Unless your strategies are built on high win rate and high profitability ratios, it may take you a looooong time to get over PDT.
  3. If you can find access to a brokerage that allows you trade freely, you’ll have to exercise discipline to overcome the “over trading” habit.

As you can see, there are quite a few caveats here, but at the end of the day your success will revolve around two things:

  • Your ability to trust your edge/strategy
  • The ability to stay disciplined enough to only trade your edge

That being said, whether you’re affected by the PDT rule or not, the goal is the same. Only trade the highest quality setups that you’ve tested well enough to trust. 

Lastly, if you place more than 4 day trades in a 5 day period, know that you will be flagged as PDT. If you don’t top up your account, you’ll have to wait 90 days, or apply for a waiver in order to trade again.

How Much Money Should You Start Day Trading with?

This is a tricky question. On the one hand, if you are above the PDT rule mentioned above, you should have plenty of money to make a good living at this. If you are under PDT, you’ll likely need more time. 

At the end of the day, it doesn’t really matter how much money you start with. In fact, we recommend starting small if you can. If you’re above PDT (above $25,000 in your account), then you may be prone to trade with large size.

Likewise, if you have an international broker, you might be able to start with only $5000, but not be affected by the PDT rule. Fees and commissions aside, we like to say that if you can’t make it with $5k or $25k, you won’t be able to make it with $100k. 

Granted, the amount you have to trade with may influence the types of stocks you trade. Larger accounts can capitalize on the slower moves of larger stocks and still make good money. Whereas smaller accounts can get in and out of smaller stocks that give bigger intraday gains.

Cash or Margin for Day Trading

This is a great question for beginners, especially depending upon whether or not you’re under the PDT rule. 

Cash or margin for day trading beginners

Using Margin

Using a margin account has its benefits if you want to trade more. Essentially, this allows you to trade as often as you want, granted you aren’t affected by the PDT rule. It can also give you up to 4x or even 6x leverage on your buying power.

But, before you think about this as a blessing, it can often be a curse if you don’t know what you’re doing.

Here are a few other key points for margin accounts:

  • If under PDT, only 3 day trades in 5 business days
  • Potential to lose more if on leverage
  • Can buy more shares than a cash account
  • The ability to also open a cash account

Using Cash

On the other hand, cash accounts allow you trade with your available cash only. Each trade you make will take two days, plus the day you traded, to reconcile. For this reason, you might consider having two accounts open as cash accounts.

This will allow you to place more trades.

Here are a few key points for cash accounts:

  • The ability to place more trades by using less of your cash per trade
  • Can be opened with a margin account, giving you two accounts
  • No leverage, so less risk
  • If you place a trade with unsettled funds (T+2), then you could get suspended

All in all, there are pros and cons for each. It really all boils down to how much money you have and how disciplined you are no matter what kind of accounts you open.

For more information on cash versus margin accounts, click here.

Tools of the Trade

Like any job, you will want quality tools to enable your success. While some people are able to make money simply using their phones and a Robinhood account, the best traders prefer quality tools.

Let’s look at a handful of things you’ll need to get started:

A Decent Computer

Unless you want to day trade on your phone, or by calling in orders to your broker (really old school) you’re going to need a laptop at a minimum. It can be difficult to navigate order flow on a phone, and you should be able to see charts and Level II data to make your decisions.

Many brokerages nowadays use both Windows and Mac for their platforms. That being said, Windows is much more prevalent for many brokers. You can, however, run Windows on a Mac with Bootcamp or a virtual desktop application.

That being said, if you decide to run multiple screens and chart windows, you’ll want a computer with a decent amount of power to support all of that. Consider using the most recent processors available, consult with the computer company about your plans, and you’ll find one that works for you.

Multiple Monitors

Not every trader likes to trade with multiple monitors, but as a general observation, most professional day traders do. There are plenty of options available from vertical screens, to curved gaming monitors.

Whatever you decide, just make sure you understand that more screens and more charts is not always best. Sometimes less is more.

At the end of the day, it is about what works for you. If you want to monitor multiple tickers, news sites, fundamental sites, chat rooms and more, then maybe you need more monitors. Sometimes cutting out the noise and having fewer screens can be beneficial as well.

A Brokerage Account and Charting Platform

Most brokerages provide you with a charting platform. However, some will charge you for using the platform.

There are handful of options like Sterling Trader Pro, or LightSpeed, among others. These platforms are considered high end day trading platforms that connect with multiple brokers to provide fast order execution.

Other brokers like WeBull, or ThinkorSwim, or Interactive Brokers have their own charting and order execution platforms. They offer free options as well. It will be up to you to decide which one is best for you.

Despite the plethora of brokerage platforms, many traders opt to use a secondary charting platform outside of their brokerage. The most popular platform for this is TradingView.com.

Essentially, this allows you to chart on one platform and trade on another.

Morning Scanners

In addition to a charting platform, you need to make sure that your system comes with a quality scanner. This is imperative for day traders who are looking to find high quality momentum setups intraday.

Many scanners will show you the highest % gainers or losers on the day, along with the highest volume or most active symbols. The best scanners will allow you to filter your resutls according to your strategy criteria, like float size, market cap, etc.

Here at TradingSim, we are one of the few simulators that allows you to replay the market with a live scanning engine. Here is example of some of the features in our scan filter.

TradingSim Day Trading Scanning Filter
TradingSim Scanning Filter

A Paper Trading Simulator that Allows You To Use Replay

The last tool we will mention is the ability to replay your trades. So many great educators and traders recommend recording your screens while you trade, like Nate Michaud. The reason for this is that it’s great review.

When you can replay the market, you can relive the experience and make notes on what you can do better next time. Maybe you missed something in the Level II or Time and Sales. Whatever the case may be, review is done best through replay.

Our Favorite Day Trading Strategies for Small Accounts and Beginners

Let’s be clear, you can find a million different ways to make money in day trading. There is is no right way or wrong way. Nonetheless, what is most important is that you find a strategy that you can master.

As the old adage goes, you don’t want to be a jack of all trades and a master of none. This is doubly true for the stock market.

Along those lines, here are our two favorite strategies for growing a small account, one for the long side, and one for the short side.

The Intraday Volatility Contraction Pattern

We talk about this strategy in depth in this article. It is essentially a fantastic way to keep your risk defined to a certain level while going long anticipating a breakout intraday. Typically it is more of a continuation pattern. Here are the 5 things to look for before the setup forms:

The Day Trading Volatility Contraction Pattern Criteria:Strong Underlying Demand Recent Overbought/Supply pressure Diminishing supply characteristics Decreasing volatility Explosive breakout

As part of this pattern, we borrow from the wisdom of Minervini’s Volatility Contraction Pattern and Gil Morales’s pocket pivots and vdu. Here’s a rough sketch of what this pattern looks like:

Intraday day trading volatility contraction pattern
Intraday volatility contraction pattern

For the setup you want to look for a nice momentum burst off the open, followed by a tightening or contracting in the base. As each consecutive higher low forms, it gives you an opportunity to enter long and risk to just below the prior higher lows.

To time your entry, we like to use the volume and price analysis that Gil Morales teaches. Here’s an example of what this looks like inside Tradingsim:

small account strategy with pocket pivots and vdu
NTEC VCP with VDU and Pocket Pivots

Notice that you can take the entry on the pocket pivot after anticipating a launch higher after the volume dry up.

This often leads to very large gains in relation to the risk you have. Here is what NTEC did on this particular trade:

Small account strategy with stop and gain
High reward to low risk

As you can see, this setup provides a very low risk to high reward, exactly what you want as a trader.

The 1-3pm Blood Bath Setup

We discuss this strategy in depth here.

In the world of low float, low-priced stocks, most of the momentum you see eventually fizzles. It’s true that most of these companies are not financially sound and are simply using the market as a tool to raise money.

As astute traders, it is our job to not believe the hype, but to trade the reality. on that token, the reality is that most penny stocks will pump and then dump through a means of diluting the shares.

One great way to take advantage of this is by anticipating the “dump” phase. After watching these pumps over and over again, you’ll begin to notice that many of them will clear out the long chasers and early shorts, then dump the price towards the end of the day.

Here is what the criteria looks like:

1-3pm Bloodbath criteria

One example of this occurred on ticker COCP. This symbol was a low float ticker that was up over 273% intraday. It had a high chance of dilution, and announced an offering after 1pm on the day of its big run.

Notice how the stock was trying to breakout to new intraday highs shortly after 1pm.

COCP double top at 273%

Shortly thereafter, COCP announced an offering at $1.54 per share, much lower than it was trading. It had an open shelf offering, which alert traders would have known about.

The result of the offering announcement was devastating. It lost half its value you in a matter of minutes.

COCP 1-3pm bloodbath
COCP 1-3pm bloodbath

Clearly you can see that this didn’t workout well for breakout buyers. As a great additional resource, we recommending studying this setup through the articles found here.

Getting Started as a Beginner in Day Trading

Now that you understand many of the basics about day trading, we encourage you to proceed with caution. This is a marathon, and not a sprint. Keep your expectations low, and your effort high.

To that end, we recommend the following activities as a summary of steps to get going:

  1. Devour as much education as you can in 6 months to 1 year.
  2. Find a solid mentorship program
  3. Begin day trading in a simulator for the first year.
  4. Only put real money to work with a broker when you can prove you have a profitable system in a simulator.
  5. Tweak your system and manage your risk over time
  6. Add to your system with new strategies only once you can provide enough income for your needs.

Feel free to reach out if you need help at [email protected]. We’d love to hear your feedback!

Podcasts are an ever-growing segment of media. In the current landscape of false information and media bias, there is really no way to tell truth from fiction. However, podcasts offer a refreshing and easily accessible approach to information distribution. Day trading podcasts are no exception, and in this post we cover the 6 best day trading podcasts worth following.

Why Day Trading Podcasts Are Important to Your Education

As we’ve said before, day trading education can be a bit like the wild west. Any Joe Blow can jump on YouTube and start advertising his/her services. And while not all of the gurus you see online are fake, you never know when you’re first getting started.

Day trading podcasts are a way to introduce you to the real traders in the community. Whether you trade forex, futures, or stocks, the podcasts we mention below can offer you a genuine look at different traders and trading styles.

Therein lies the benefit of podcasts in trading. Gone are the days of not knowing about this guru or that guru before you sign up. You can literally watch an interview on just about any of them, nowadays.

In addition, you now have a wealth of education at your finger tips, for free. While we advocate for quality education services, nothing beats a free education.

How to Get the Most out of Day Trading Podcasts

The SimCast day trading podcast
The SimCast day trading video podcast

There are a few things to pay attention to when listening to a trading podcast.

  1. Trading psychology nuggets
  2. Anecdotes about trading
  3. Trading styles and technical analysis
  4. The importance of risk management

While these are just a handful of things to watch out for, the ultimate goal of these shows is to inform you. As developing traders, you need to be reminded of what works, and what doesn’t.

Along those lines, hearing from successful traders about how they overcame adversity in order to find consistency is like finding gold. Not only does it provide you with a “virtual” form of mentorship, but it gives you access to the most successful day traders’ minds, for free.

And on that token, and in no particular order, let’s jump right into the 6 Best Day Trading Podcasts available right now. Keep in mind, each has its own strengths and style.

The 6 Best Day Trading Podcasts

1. The SimCast day trading podcast with John McDowell

The Simcast day trading podcast
Michael Covel Podcast

·         Podcast Name: The SimCast

·         Host: John McDowell & Sam Pryor

·         Podcast Type: Interview, Trade Recap

·         Link: https://tradingsim.com/blog/category/the-simcast/

·         Frequency: Weekly

·         Where to listen: YouTube, Website

We might be a little biased, but our very own SimCast is a great way to discover successful traders, their strategies, and stories. John tries to pull as much out of each guest as possible, and loves diving into charts. Not only that, but he has a knack for finding “unknown” traders who are consistently profitable.

While some podcasts focus on the story or the anecdotes, John believes in the process of discovering setups on the chart. As much as possible, he likes to know the purpose behind the trade — the thesis, if you will. In addition, he likes to know entry criteria, probabilities for success, systematic or discretionary approaches, and mindset.

Altogether, the SimCast is a top day trading podcast and a great way for new and experienced day traders to learn something new. The approach is refreshing and unbiased. John isn’t afraid to bring controversial traders on the show, just to share opposing viewpoints.

Definitely worth subscribing to, we highly recommend the SimCast.

2. Confessions of a Market Maker trading podcast with JJ and Ray

Confessions of a market maker day trading podcast

·         Podcast Name: Confessions of a Market Maker

·         Host: All day Ray and J.J.

·         Podcast Type: Talk show/Interview/Reviews

·         Link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAkEaTZXiMMXKrYqwM6dZ5A

·         Frequency: Weekly

·         Where to listen: iTunes, YouTube

Ray and J.J. are fun and entertaining. J.J. is a market maker with over 20 years of experience and goes by @vwaptrader1 on Twitter. You can find J.J. at @AllxDayxRayx. Together, they provide a really unique dynamic with really high profile guests.

Some of the more popular guests they have had on the show range from Mark Cuban to Anthony Scaramucci. Topics can range from the blockchain to trading psychology. He’s had NFL coaches on the show, the youngest female floor trader in NYSE history, and a Market Wizard.

Whatever your taste in trading, you’re bound to find a lot of value in the content. J.J. provides a lot of great insight into the “behind the scenes” thought process of trading, while Ray keeps the convo fun and engaging.

Be sure to give them a follow and subscribe to the YouTube channel.

3. BtheStory day trading podcast with Alex Bustos

Alex Bustos day trader and podcaster

·         Podcast Name: BtheStory

·         Host: Alex Bustos

·         Podcast Type: Talk show/Interview/Reviews

·         Link: https://bthestory.net/

·         Frequency: Weekly

·         Where to listen: iTunes, Spotify, Google Play, Stitcher, YouTube, Website

Alex has put together a very energetic and unique approach to day trading podcasts. Starting out, his virtual interviews included many big name day traders like Tim Grittani, Nate Michaud, and others.

Recently, Alex has transitioned to more in-person interviews. Often found visiting the homes of day traders, or prop firms, he has a knack for finding good traders.

Alex’s fun personality and energy, coupled with his ability to ask great questions, leads to really great interviews. He understands the struggles that newer traders face. Along those lines, he draws from his own experience to create valuable content for his viewers.

At the end of the day, it is clear that Alex is passionate not only about his show and his trading, but also about the trading community. Most of his content is on the shorter side, but it’s very engaging and with a lot of great nuggets.

We highly recommend it.

4. SMB Capital YouTube Channel

SMB Capital Logo

·         Podcast Name: SMB Capital

·         Host: Mike Bellafiore

·         Podcast Type: Interviews/Recaps

·         Link: https://www.youtube.com/user/smbcapital

·         Frequency: Weekly

·         Where to listen: YouTube, Website

SMB Capital is proprietary trading firm. One of the founders, Mike Bellafiore, is well-known for his books and educational material. As part of his firm, he advocates for education. They actually have an arm of the company called SMB U that is dedicated to retail trader education.

Mike and his team of traders regularly put out relevant content regarding the state of the markets, what is working, and what’s not. It isn’t exactly a day trading podcast, but many of his younger traders share personal videos and stories of their successes and failures. You might also find tutorials on topics like tape reading.

While it may not be as good as sitting at a desk inside SMB Capital, their channel is a great resource for budding traders. If you can’t afford the courses they teach, its a great way to get your feet wet and discover new tips and tricks for your trading.

5. Chat with Traders podcast by Aaron Fifield

Chat with traders trading podcast

·         Podcast Name: Chat with Traders

·         Host: Andrew Aaron Fifield

·         Podcast Type: Talk show/Interview

·         Link: https://chatwithtraders.com/podcast/

·         Frequency: Monthly

·         Where to listen: iTunes, YouTube, Android, Website

Chat with Traders is a day trading podcast that stays true to its name. It features a weekly/monthly show with traders, mostly day traders but with some swing traders and investors.

Some of the most famous names in all of trading have appeared on Chat with Traders. This list includes Jack Schwager and Linda Raschke among other big names.

Aaron Fifield started the show around 2015. Since then, he has done over 200 interviews. In addition to his interviews, some of his more popular episodes are compilations. We particularly enjoy his “Best of Trading Psychology” compilations.

While Aaron’s conversational style is casual, he has a great way of getting his guests to go deep. Listeners will enjoy learning how other traders look at the markets, glimpses into what trading strategies they use, and how they’ve overcome adversity to reach success.

Unlike the SimCast or BtheStory, Aaron’s is more of an audio podcast, though he is trying to incorporate trade recaps as of late.

Chat with traders is not just “another day trading podcast,” but has been featured on big websites including Business Insider and Investopedia.

Definitely worth a subscription in our opinion.

6. TradingNut day trading podcast with Cam Hawkins

TradingNut Podcast logo

·         Podcast Name: Trading Nut

·         Host: Cam Hawkins

·         Podcast Type: Talk show

·         Link: https://tradingnut.com

·         Frequency: Weekly

·         Where to listen: iTunes, Android, Website, YouTube

TradingNut is a podcast for day traders of all asset classes, though it focuses heavily on forex.

If you prefer a more straightforward approach to trading, Cam’s show is worth a watch. The show regularly covers how other traders feel about the markets, their trading systems and strategies, and unique ways to exploit markets.

The podcast is hosted by Cam Hawkins. This weekly podcast talks about all things to do with trading, including dedicating a decent amount of air time towards trading psychology.

Cam regularly hosts professional forex traders, crypto traders, psychologists, and more. His topics can be as obscure as moon phases, or as typical as Fibonacci indicators and head and shoulders patterns.

Whatever style of trader you are, TradingNut always puts out relevant content for free.

7. Better System Trader day trading podcast with Andrew Swanscott

Better System Trader day trading podcast

·         Podcast Name: Better System Trader

·         Host: Andrew Swanscott

·         Podcast Type: Interviews/Talk show

·         Link: http://bettersystemtrader.com/category/podcast/

·         Frequency: Weekly

·         Where to listen: iTunes, Android, Soundcloud, Website

Better System Trader is a podcast and a blog that was put together by Andrew Swanscott. The content focuses heavily on systems traders or mechanical traders.

To that end, if you are looking for new trading strategy ideas or ways to improve your existing trading strategy, Better System Trader is the place to go! The podcast has received praise from different members within the trading circle.

Better System Trader is a free podcast that is not just limited to talking about trading strategies. The show also focuses on money management as well as tips and tricks from professional traders.

Although Better System Trader’s podcasts have to do with trading systems, it is not confined to just one market, therefore listeners can apply the strategy ideas to any markets of their choice.

You can listen either via iTunes store, Stitcher or Soundcloud, or simply visit the Better System Trader website. Andrew updates consistently and often shares tons of trading codes (for different trading platforms) and ideas to fine tune day trading systems.

8. The High Performance Podcast with Jake Humphrey and Damian Hughes

The High Performance Podcast

·         Podcast Name: The High Performance Podcast

·         Author: Jake Humphrey & Damian Hughes

·         Podcast Type: Interviews/Talk show

·         Link: The High Performance Podcast

·         Frequency: Weekly

·         Where to listen: iTunes, YouTube, Website

You might be thinking, “but what does this have to do with trading?” Well, that’s a fair question. We included this podcast because trading is a performance sport.

If you are going to perform at the top of your game, you need a keen awareness of the mindset it takes. Jake and Damian interview successful athletes, business people, artists, and more. They are constantly in pursuit of the qualities inherent with high performers.

With a background in organizational psychology, Damian is a professor and keenly aware of the best questions to ask. Jake is an anchor on BT’s Sports Premier League. So, he knows a thing or to about performance sports.

Together, they bring out some of the most inspirational content you can find on the web. It’s not over the top, either. It’s simply encouraging and motivational.

This one should definitely be a part of your regular listening routine.

Why should you listen to a day trading podcast?

The biggest benefit with podcasts (or for that matter with any audio type of content) is in the interviews. Every so often, a day trading podcast that has an interview with some traders or some experts in a certain field can give out tons of wisdom which might be missed otherwise.

Similarly, listening to a day trading podcast can be beneficial for those who are commuting to work and are seriously committed to learning how to improve their day trading.

However, there are also many video podcasts now and most of them are free. This allows you insights into technical analysis like never before.

Want more day trading podcasts?

You can visit https://player.fm/podcasts/Trading and browse through the various categories including day trading, forex, futures, economy, stock markets and many more.