Archive for the ‘Internet Stocks’ Category

How To Become A Day Trader

During the heyday of the tech bubble in the late 1990s, day traders made easy money buying and selling Internet stocks. It didn't take much skill to succeed in those days. In just a 17-month period, from October 1998 to March 2000, the Nasdaq Composite Index skyrocketed from roughly 1,344 to an all-time high of around 5,132. All you had to do was ride that tidal wave to rake in the profits. Many of those traders made just as much shorting the index on its way down to a low of about 1,108 in October 2002, losing 78% of its value in 31 months.

Once the bubble had fully deflated, the easy money dried up. Many of those who had profited through good luck and timing left trading and looked for other work. They discovered that day trading, like any other profession, requires education and skills to consistently make a living. For more information, see Day Trading: An Introduction.

BasicsA pure day trader buys and sells stocks or other investments and ends the trading day in cash with no open positions. If a position is held overnight or for several days, it's called a swing trade. Most day traders use both approaches, depending on their trading style and the nature of their investments.

Day trading requires a professional software platform and a high-speed Internet connection. While it's possible to design and build your own trading platform, most traders use a prepackaged setup provided by their brokerage or a specialized software company. It's best to have a powerful desktop with at least two monitors, and preferably four to six. You need multiple screens to display the charts and technical indicators that will provide your buy and sell signals.

When you use a brokerage platform, ensure that real-time news and data feeds are included in the package. You'll need that data to construct charts that expose trends and portray the time frames and trading strategies you want.

Technical IndicatorsFamiliarity with stocks and market fundamentals isn't enough to succeed as a trader. You should understand technical analysis and all of the tools used to dissect chart patterns, trading volume and price movements. Some of the more common indicators are resistance and support levels, moving average convergence/divergence (MACD), volatility, price oscillators and Bollinger Bands.

Learning and understanding how these indicators work only scratches the surface of what you'll need to know to develop your personal trading style. Hundreds of books have been written about day trading, and you can also take classes online or in person.

StrategiesTrading requires sufficient capital to take advantage of leveraging fairly large positions. Most traders make their money on relatively small price movements in liquid stocks or indexes with mid to high volatility. You need price movement to make money, either long or short. Higher volatility implies higher risk, with the potential for greater rewards and losses.

Unless you can buy several hundred or more shares of a stock, you won't make enough money on trades to cover the commissions. The lower the price of the stock, the more shares you'll need to gain sufficient leverage and total price movement.

The key to successful trading is developing techniques to determine entry and exit points. Most traders develop a style that they stick with, once they are comfortable with it. Some only trade one or two stocks every day, while others trade a small basket of favorites. The advantage of trading only a few stocks is that you learn how they act under different conditions and how movement is affected by the key market makers.

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How To Become A Day Trader

IWO Premarket, 3-28 – Video

28-03-2012 07:37 Check out my blog at http://www.investingwithoptions.com What's in this video: - a quick clarification on the RHT earnings option trade - my analysis of MOS going into earnings - why vol is a buy on the euro (my blog will have trade details) - the internet stocks that are on fire: YELP BIDU LNKD AMZN - the degenerate smallcaps that could follow: YNDX RENN

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IWO Premarket, 3-28 - Video

Web Stocks Rise on Consumption Boost Prospects: China Overnight

By Belinda Cao - Tue Mar 27 23:03:15 GMT 2012

Solar stocks led a decline in Chinese shares traded in New York on speculation that Italy will follow Germany in cutting subsidies to the industry, dimming the outlook for global installations.

LDK Solar Co. tumbled the most in four days while Trina Solar Ltd. (TSL) dropped to a two-week low. The Bloomberg China-US Equity Index (CH55BN) of the most-traded Chinese shares in the U.S. lost 0.3 percent to 105.42 yesterday, falling for the first time in three days. China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., Asias largest refiner, traded at its biggest discount to Hong Kong shares in three months.

Italy, the worlds second-largest solar market, is proposing to cut its industry subsidy by 50 percent, Citigroup Inc. technology analyst Timothy Arcuri said in a research note e-mailed yesterday, citing a first draft of the European nations fifth energy plan that the bank had obtained. Germany, the biggest solar market, will reduce aid to the industry by as much as 29 percent from April 1.

Solar stocks trading reacted to the news on the subsidy cut in Italy where solar sales normally offer manufacturers higher margins, Chris Kettenmann, an analyst at Miller Tabak & Co LLC in New York said by phone yesterday. The reductions in subsidies in Germany and Italy would be absorbed by cost cutting at Chinese solar makers.

The iShares FTSE China 25 Index Fund, the biggest Chinese exchange-traded fund in the U.S., retreated 0.2 percent to $37.25, after climbing the most in two weeks on March 26.

LDK, a solar wafer producer based in Xinyu in Jiangxi province, slid 5.4 percent to $4.24, the biggest daily drop since March 21. Trina, Chinas fifth-largest solar-panel supplier based in Changzhou in the eastern Jiangsu province, lost 2.7 percent to $7.44, the lowest level since March 12. Suntech Power Holdings Co., the worlds largest solar-panel maker, sank 1.6 percent to a two-week low of $3.05.

The cost of photovoltaic subsidies in Italy is higher than Citigroup had estimated, Arcuri said, citing the Italian energy document. The plan indicates a significant slowdown in the market, and the ongoing ad-hoc nature of cuts in Germany and Italy means financing for big projects in Europe will remain challenging, analysts led by Arcuri wrote in the report.

American depositary receipts of China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. (SNP), known as Sinopec, retreated 0.9 percent in its first decline in three days, to $112.40 as oil futures rose for a third day on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The ADRs, each representing 100 common shares in Sinopec, traded 1.3 percent below its Hong Kong stock, the biggest discount since Dec. 19.

The company, Asias largest refiner, added 0.8 percent to HK$8.84 in Hong Kong, or $1.14 per share, while shares climbed 0.1 percent to 7.45 yuan in Shanghai trading, the equivalent of $1.18.

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Web Stocks Rise on Consumption Boost Prospects: China Overnight

Facebook stocks up on patent artillery

It seems that Facebook is preparing its artillery for the patent infringement battlefield. The social network company has confirmed that it bought several patents from IBM Corp. but did not disclose any other details regarding the patent acquisitions. IBM was also mum on the topic.

Just several weeks ago, rumors spread that Facebook acquired around 750 software and networking patents from IBM right after Yahoo! accused Facebook of infringing 10 of its patents.

The patent buying spree came as major Internet players battle it out in patent infringement courts and also right after Facebook prepared for an initial public offering.

Yahoo! has filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California accusing Facebook of infringing its patent on areas such as advertising, privacy and messaging. It asked the court to stop the alleged infringement activities of Facebook and to assess the damages the brought about by the patent infringements. In the suit, Yahoo! said that Facebook's growth to more than 850 million users "has been based in large part on Facebook's use of Yahoo!'s patented technology."

"We're disappointed that Yahoo!, a longtime business partner of Facebook and a company that has substantially benefited from its association with Facebook, has decided to resort to litigation," a Facebook spokeswoman said.

In the suit, Yahoo! said that Facebook's growth to more than 850 million users "has been based in large part on Facebook's use of Yahoo!'s patented technology."

"For much of the technology upon which Facebook is based, Yahoo! got there first and was therefore granted patents by the United States Patent Office to protect those innovations," Yahoo! said. "Yahoo!'s patents relate to cutting edge innovations in online products, including in messaging, news feed generation, social commenting, advertising display, preventing click fraud and privacy controls," the Internet giant added.

In recent years, Yahoo! has been struggling to build a profitable business and maintain its image as the Internet's leading light.

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Facebook stocks up on patent artillery

Stocks to Watch: Yahoo!, AOL, Illumina

NEW YORK -- Yahoo! YHOO appointed three directors to its board, setting up for a proxy fight with Third Point LLC, one of its largest shareholders. Hedge fund Third Point, which owns a 5.8% stake in Yahoo!, last week launched a bid to gain four seats on the Internet company's board. Yahoo!'s nominees to the board are John Hayes, chief marketing officer of American Express AXP , Peter Liguori, former chief operating officer of Discovery Communications DISCA , and Thomas McInerney, the outgoing chief financial officer of IAC/InterActiveCorp IACI . AOL AOL hired Evercore Partners to find a buyer for its more than 800 patents and explore other strategic options, Bloomberg reported, citing three people with knowledge of the situation. Private-equity firms, including Providence Equity Partners, TPG Capital and Silver Lake, have approached AOL about taking the company private, yet the overtures haven't resulted in a deal, said the people. Evercore is trying to help AOL wring value from a patent portfolio, which some estimate can yield more than $1 billion in licensing income. Roche, the Swiss drug giant, extended its $5.7 billion cash bid for Illumina ILMN , the U.S. gene-sequencing company, for a second time. Roche is offering $44.50 a share for Illumina. The acceptance period was extended to April 20. Illumina continues to reject the bid. "Illumina's board of directors continues to believe that Roche's offer is grossly inadequate, and that Illumina is positioned to create far more value than Roche has offered. Our stockholders clearly agree," the company said Monday in a statement. The biggest earnings names on Monday include Cal-Maine Foods CALM and Apollo Group APOL . -- Written by Joseph Woelfel >To contact the writer of this article, click here: Joseph Woelfel Related links: Apple's iPhone 5: What to Expect The 5 Dumbest Things on Wall Street This Week: March 23

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Stocks to Watch: Yahoo!, AOL, Illumina