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Day Trading Strategy
US investors can trade
shares easily anywhere in the country
The news that many people were killed in the stock broking firm
All-Tech in Atlanta has raised concern about the growing practice of
day trading.
The huge stock market boom of the last few years has made many
Americans into millionaires, and has attracted many others into day
trading - the practice of trading shares on a daily basis for
profit.
All-Tech is one of the largest day trading firms in the US with
about 1,500 active accounts, each trader having to put up $50,000 to
open an account.
But the growth of the Internet and of low-cost Internet stockbrokers
like Charles Schwab and E-trade has made it easy for private
individuals to get involved in the stock market for much less. Each
trade now costs as little as $9.95 (£6), and can be carried out from
home, or at the offices of many stockbrokers.
A risky gamble
Some people have even given up their day jobs, attracted by the
possibility of huge gains on the stock market.
But many people, who have only begun trading in the last few years,
have not experienced a severe stock market reverse, only the boom
conditions of the last few years.
Internet brokers have made daytrading cheap and easy Although he had
not traded since April, witnesses suggested that the man believed to
have carried out the killings, Mark Barton, may have sustained big
losses in his stock market trading.
On Wednesday, all the major US stock markets fell sharply, on
worries that inflation may be on the increase, and interest rates
may have to rise.
The Dow Jones Average fell more than 180 points, or 2%, while the
Nasdaq stock market, which appeals to many day traders because
shares are cheaper, fell by 3% and has dropped by 7% in the past two
weeks.
There have already been sharp reversals in some highly speculative
stocks, especially in the Internet sector. Stocks like Internet
bookseller Amazon.com, which increased in value nearly 10 times in
the past year, are now worth only half its value of a few months
ago.
Now there are fears of a more general decline in stock prices.
That could hurt not just day traders, but the millions of Americans
who have stopped saving and have relied on the gains from their
shares to pay for large purchases made on credit.
The boom has spread share ownership widely in the United States,
attracted by the promise of ever-increasing wealth.
But it now appears that the risks of day trading could be tragically
large as well.
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