SharestoBuy

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As an occupation, trading can be deceptively simple. You open an account in one of the many platforms available, pick the right shares to buy at a relatively low price, wait until the price rises and sell them for a profit. If you don’t know what you’re doing however, trading is nothing more than gambling but without the glamour.

Things to consider before starting as a trader

It’s easy to read alluring headlines like “If you own $2,000 Microsoft stocks 10 years, here’s what you’ll have now” and be pulled into the punishing world of the stock market but before you jump the gun and start trading, there are a few things you need to consider. In trading, for there to be winners, there has to be losers as well. Know that your competition will include well-equipped Wall Street traders who have access to the kind of resource independent traders could only dream of.

The second thing is, examine your financial condition. Are you prepared to lose the money you’ve set aside for trading? It is statistically improbable for you to win all the time and there is a distinct possibility that you’ll lose quite a bit before having the necessary experience to end up with a winning position. If you’re fine with the above conditions, then it’s time to take your first step in becoming a full-fledged trader.

Get started with the basics

First things first, you need to learn the basics of trading. Start reading up on the plethora of trading materials available across the internet, books, or from trading courses and get familiar with how trading itself works. Even the process of buying and selling is more complicated than what you’d find in everyday life. Trading actions are defined as orders and there are several different types you have to familiarize yourself with before you begin trading.

Other basic materials include the different trading types, types of market available and their characteristics, trading and market terms that will naturally come up in your daily routines and news sources that you could use as tips. Understanding these basics is highly important. Trading is a mostly solitary affair and because it’s highly dependent on timing, you won’t have much time to consider your options or asking for help before making your decisions.

Read up on some advanced materials

Once you’re done figuring out what type of trader you’d like to be (day, swing or position) and have made a choice on the market you’d like to enter (Forex, bonds, stocks), it’s time you start to read materials specific to your choice. Each market has techniques and analytical tools that might suit them better than with any other market. Using the wrong tool or the right tool in a wrong way is no better than bringing knife to a gunfight.