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Trading For Canadians For Dummies (eBook)

eBook Download: EPUB
2024 | 2. Auflage
John Wiley & Sons (Verlag)
978-1-394-20799-2 (ISBN)

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Trading For Canadians For Dummies - Stephanie Bedard-Chateauneuf, Lita Epstein, Grayson D. Roze
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Trading stocks, commodities, and ETFs, made simple-for Canadians

Trading For Canadians For Dummies offers you a tried and trusted approach to enhance profits. This updated edition presents a proven system for analyzing stocks, trends, and indicators and setting a buy and sell range beforehand to decrease risk in any type of market. Even if you've never made a single trade before, you can use this hands-on guide to get you started. And if you're an intermediate trader looking to take it to the next level, you'll find stress-free approaches to position trading, technical analysis, and due diligence. Adapted for Canadian readers with Canada-specific examples, this Dummies guide discusses the Toronto Stock Exchange, brokerage options in Canada, and how Canadians can become certified traders.

  • Learn how to trade successfully in up markets, down markets, and during recession
  • Earn profits by trading stocks, commodities, cryptocurrency, and EFTs
  • Update yourself on current tax laws and regulations to reduce your liability and risk
  • Discover strategies and methods that are proven to enhance results and take the guesswork out of trading

Trading For Canadians For Dummies is for investors at all levels who are looking for a clear guide to successfully trading stocks in any type of market. It's also a great primer for those who want to make a career out of trading.

Stephanie Bedard-Chateauneuf, MBA, writes for The Motley Fool, StockStreetNews, and other financial outlets. She previously worked for the National Bank of Canada. Lita Epstein, MBA, has authored more than 40 books, including Reading Financial Reports For Dummies. Grayson D. Roze is the Vice President of Operations at StockCharts.com.


Trading stocks, commodities, and ETFs, made simple for Canadians Trading For Canadians For Dummies offers you a tried and trusted approach to enhance profits. This updated edition presents a proven system for analyzing stocks, trends, and indicators and setting a buy and sell range beforehand to decrease risk in any type of market. Even if you ve never made a single trade before, you can use this hands-on guide to get you started. And if you re an intermediate trader looking to take it to the next level, you ll find stress-free approaches to position trading, technical analysis, and due diligence. Adapted for Canadian readers with Canada-specific examples, this Dummies guide discusses the Toronto Stock Exchange and brokerage options in Canada. Learn how to trade successfully in up markets, down markets, and during recession Earn profits by trading stocks, options, and EFTs Update yourself on current tax laws and regulations to reduce your liability and risk Discover strategies and methods that are proven to enhance results and take the guesswork out of trading Trading For Canadians For Dummies is for investors at all levels who are looking for a clear guide to successfully trading stocks in any type of market.

Stephanie Bedard-Chateauneuf, MBA, writes for The Motley Fool, StockStreetNews, and other financial outlets. She previously worked for the National Bank of Canada. Lita Epstein, MBA, has authored more than 40 books, including Reading Financial Reports For Dummies. Grayson D. Roze is the Vice President of Operations at StockCharts.com.

Introduction 1

Part 1: Getting Started with Trading 5

Chapter 1: The Ups and Downs of Trading Stocks 7

Chapter 2: Exploring Markets and Stock Exchanges 19

Chapter 3: Going for Broker: Discovering Brokerage Options 31

Chapter 4: Putting Your Key Business Tool to Work: The Computer 51

Part 2: Reading the Fundamentals: Fundamental Analysis 67

Chapter 5: Fundamentals 101: Observing Market Behaviour 69

Chapter 6: Digging into Fundamental Analysis 91

Chapter 7: Listening to Analyst Calls 111

Part 3: Reading the Charts: Technical Analysis 125

Chapter 8: Seeing Is Believing: An Introduction to Technical Analysis 127

Chapter 9: Reading Bar Charts Is Easy (Really) 139

Chapter 10: Following Trends to Boost Your Probability of Success 159

Chapter 11: Calculating Indicators and Oscillators 175

Part 4: Developing Strategies for When to Buy and Sell Stocks 197

Chapter 12: Money Management Techniques: Building a More Robust Portfolio 199

Chapter 13: Combining Fundamental and Technical Analyses for Optimum Strategy 217

Chapter 14: Minimizing Trading Risks Using Exchange-Traded Funds 237

Chapter 15: Executing Your Trades 247

Chapter 16: Developing Your Own Powerful Trading System 265

Part 5: Risk-Taker's Paradise 285

Chapter 17: The Basics of Swing Trading 287

Chapter 18: The Basics of Day Trading 301

Chapter 19: Doing It by Derivatives 315

Chapter 20: Going Foreign (Forex) 333

Part 6: The Part of Tens 349

Chapter 21: More Than Ten Huge Trading Mistakes 351

Chapter 22: Ten Trading Survival Techniques 359

Index 365

Chapter 1

The Ups and Downs of Trading Stocks


IN THIS CHAPTER

Making sense of trading

Exploring trading types

Gathering your trading tools

Discovering keys to success

Making lots of money is the obvious goal of most people who decide to enter the world of trading. How successful you become as a trader depends on how well you use the tools, gather the needed information, and interpret the data you have. You need to develop the discipline to apply all that you know about trading toward developing a winning trading strategy.

Discovering how to avoid getting caught up in the emotional aspects of trading — the highs of a win and the lows of a loss — is key to developing a profitable trading style. Trading is a business and needs to be approached with the same logic you’d apply to any other business decision. Setting goals, researching your options, planning and implementing your strategies, and assessing your success are just as important for trading as they are for any other business venture.

In this book, we help you explore the world of trading and the fundamentals of trading activity. In this chapter, we give you an overview of trading and an introduction to the tools you need, the research skills you must use, and the basics of developing all this information into a successful trading strategy.

Distinguishing Trading from Investing


Trading is not the same thing as investing. Investors buy stocks and hold them for a long time through successive waves of markets that go up and go down. Long-term investors do not change their horses very often. Traders, on the other hand, hold stocks for as little as a few minutes or as long as several months, and sometimes possibly even a year or more. The specific amount of time depends on the type of trader you want to become. Online trading has become increasingly popular in recent years as it is much faster and more efficient than traditional methods.

Investors want to carefully balance an investment portfolio among growth stocks, value stocks, domestic stocks, and foreign stocks, along with long-, short-, and intermediate-term bonds. A well-balanced Canadian portfolio generally offers investors a steady return of between 5 percent and 8 percent, depending on the type of investments and amount of risk they are willing to take.

For investors, an aggressive portfolio with a mix of 80 percent invested in stocks and 20 percent in bonds, if well balanced, can average as high as a 12 percent annual return for investors during a 20-year period; however, in some years, the portfolio will be down, and in others, it will go through periods of high growth. The opposite, a conservative portfolio with 20 percent invested in stocks and 80 percent in bonds, is likely to provide a yield on the lower end of the spectrum, closer to 5 percent. The volatility and risk associated with the latter portfolio, however, would be considerably less. Investors who have ten or more years before they need to use their investment money tend to put together more aggressive portfolios. Those who need to live off the money tend to put together less aggressive portfolios that give them regular cash flows, which is what you get from a portfolio invested mostly in bonds.

As a trader, you look for the best position for your money and then set a goal of exceeding what an investor can otherwise expect from an aggressive portfolio. During certain times within the market cycle, your best option may be to sit on the sidelines and not even be active in the market. In this book, we show you how to read the signals to decide when you need to be in the market, and how to find the best sectors in which to play the market and the best stocks within those sectors.

Seeing Why Traders Do What They Do


Improving their potential profit from stock transactions is obviously the key reason why most people decide to trade. People who want to grow their portfolios rather than merely maintain them hope their investing strategy will outperform average market returns. Regardless of whether traders invest through mutual funds or stocks, they hope the portfolio of securities they select gives them superior returns — and they’re willing to work at it.

People who decide to trade make a conscious decision to take a more active role in increasing their profit potential. Rather than just riding the market up and down, they search for opportunities to find the best times and places to be in the market based on economic conditions and market cycles.

Traders who successfully watched the technical signals before the stock crash of 2008 either shorted stocks or moved into cash positions before stocks tumbled and then carefully jumped back in as they saw opportunities for profits. Some position traders simply stayed on the sidelines, waiting for the right time to jump back in. Even though they were waiting, they also carefully researched their opportunities, selected stocks for their watch lists, and then let technical signals from the charts they kept tell them when to get in or out of a position.

Successful Trading Characteristics


To succeed at trading, you must be disciplined and, more than likely, work against your natural tendencies, fighting the urge to prove yourself right and accepting the fact that you’re going to make mistakes. As a trader, you must develop separate strategies for when you want to make a trade to enter a position and for when you want to make a trade and exit that position, all the while not allowing emotional considerations to affect the decisions you make on the basis of the successful trading strategy you designed.

You want to manage your money, but in doing so you don’t have to prove whether your particular buying or selling decision was right or wrong. Setting up stop-loss points for every position you establish and adhering to them is the right course of action, even though you may later have to admit that you were wrong. Your portfolio will survive, and you can always reenter a position whenever trends indicate the time is right again.

You need to make stock trends your guide, ignoring any emotional ties that you have to any stocks. Although you may indeed miss the lowest entry price or the highest exit price, you nevertheless will be able to sleep at night, knowing that your money is safe and your trading business is alive and well.

Traders find out how to ride a trend and when to get off the train before it jumps the tracks and heads toward monetary disaster. Enjoy the ride but know which stop you’re getting off at so you don’t turn profits into losses.

Tools of the Trade


The first step you need to take in becoming a trader is gathering all the right tools so that you can open and operate your business successfully. Your computer needs to meet the hardware requirements and other computer specifics we describe in Chapter 4, including processor speed, memory storage, and screen size. You may even want more than one screen, depending on your trading style. High-speed Internet access is a must; without it, you may as well never open up shop.

We also introduce you to the various types of software in Chapter 4, showing you what can help your trading business ride the wave to success. We evaluate traders’ charting favourites, such as StockCharts and TradeStation, along with Internet-based charting and data-feed services. We also talk about the various trading platforms available and how to work with brokers.

After you have all the hardware and software in place, you need to hone your analytical skills. Many traders advocate using only technical analysis, but we show you how using both technical and fundamental analyses can help you excel as a trader. (Part 2 covers fundamental analysis, and Part 3 discusses technical analysis.)

Taking Time to Trade More Than Just Stocks


The ways traders trade are varied. Some are position traders, while others are swing traders and day traders. Although many of the tools they use are the same or similar, each variety of trader works within differing time frames to reach goals specific to the type of trades they’re making.

Position trading


Position traders use technical analysis to find the most promising stock trends and enter and exit positions in the market based on those trends. They can hold positions for just a few days, a few months, or possibly as long as a year or more. Position trading is the type of trading that we discuss the most in this book. After introducing you to the stock markets, the types of brokers and market makers with whom you deal with, and the tools you need, we discuss the basics of fundamental analysis and technical analysis to help you become a better position trader.

WEATHERING A CHANGING MARKET


Global stress from the COVID recession, the 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine followed by a surge in inflation in 2021, as well as the global supply-chain crisis, threw the market into bear market territory after the longest bull market in history. Investors still need to determine the long-term effects of the pandemic on the global economy.

In Canada, the S&P/TSX Composite index peaked at 22,005.94 on March 25, 2022, but since that time has been on a downward trend. The Bank of Canada raised interest rates because of an inflation surge to help cool the markets. Markets do favour low interest rate environments because they encourage growth and encourage companies to...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 10.1.2024
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Beruf / Finanzen / Recht / Wirtschaft Geld / Bank / Börse
Recht / Steuern Wirtschaftsrecht
Wirtschaft Betriebswirtschaft / Management
Schlagworte Börsenhandel • Canada investing • Canadian stocks • chart patterns • chart patterns book • Finance & Investments • Finanz- u. Anlagewesen • Investing • investing book • position trading • stock market book • Stock Trading Book • Swing Trading • Toronto Stock Exchange • Trading • Trading Book • trading books best sellers
ISBN-10 1-394-20799-9 / 1394207999
ISBN-13 978-1-394-20799-2 / 9781394207992
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