BASIC TRADING RULES

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Friday, August 5, 2011

http://chandigarh.quikr.com/Do-you-know-how-to-get-Lowest-Brokerage-slab-Maximum-limits-with-reasonable-consistent-Trading-Profits-daily-W0QQAdIdZ75207001

Sunday, May 8, 2011

New 99% Profitable Trading Strategy

Trade with only 1 stock qty and having wide SL @ 3%
If market is profitable with 1 then it is advised to go for more qty with tight SL @.25 to .50 paisa
Control the nerves when trading
Often time trader loose their nerves when trading.  Traing should be purely mechanical.  Emotion cloud the thinking hence the results are negative.
Emotion of fear and greed are very lethal when trading.

know the value of your capital.  Dont ever loose more than 20% in a single day.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Beginners Basics


Did you know?

That 70% people loss their money in stocks evreyday due to lack of knowledge and skills required (source CNBC Business News)
With the new Essential Stock ebook you can involve yourself in profitable investors and invest safely.
Basic Investment principles, Skills and mindset of profitable investor

The most practical ebook with out anyadditional clutter of knowledge which is ot essential for begineers.
The principle
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invest watch and wait game.
Learning from The Tiger
life is simple
90-10 rule
take it easy
the visulalisation
be organised
if ur not discipline joing army or networking

Saturday, April 23, 2011

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Top Earning Strategies

This page is dedicated to the top most strategies for making good profit out of intraday trading.
These strategies are based on my personal experience and there is no guarantee of profit because it all is based on the practice.

The 2 4 8 rule

Activity           Qty       
Buy                   4
sell                    2
Stop loss           8

Intially to start with pls buy or sell exact qty as writte above.  The reason for this is :-

  • Because after trading 5 minutes you will automatically get a fair idea of that particular stock movement.
  • Also the market movement or chances of profitable trade.
  • If I cant profit with less qty than I will also cant profit with large quantities.  Large quantities only shows the desperation, lost focus, greed, fear.  This is most important.  Profit always starts as small.
  • Hence this strategy prevents big losses to my account.

If I get profit from these quantities then a add one zero to these quantities and so on.

Buy sell at difference prices quickly.  This is a very profitable scalping technique which Im using for very good profit in less time. 

The strategies involved

I want to pass these ideas to you out  of the gratitude I have towards the great teachers who delivered me from my own ignorance  during my initial years of struggle.

The bottom line here is that part of your success as a trader depends on to the extent to
which you're willing rely on objective analysis and use principles that go against the grain
of the establishment. What does the establishment teach? Review the content of magazines
such as Technical Analysis of Stock and Commodities and Futures. Look at the financial web
sites out there. You'll see these common themes:

1) Strategies and Techniques. There's always a hot new methodology that will somehow
improve your trading results. Success is from some external source, not something from within
yourself.

2) Predict the future. Figure the exact future dates when the market is likely to turn up or down.
Make a fortune buying bottoms and selling tops.

3) It's all in your head. No matter what your trading strategy is, you can succeed as long as you
have the right mental attitude.

While many of the ideas coming out of these themes may be valid and useful, they should not be
your main focus. If you were to start with a blank slate and allow your trading approach to be
completely reprogrammed, I'd upload the following into your brain: 

•  First start with money management. Understand the mathematics of how you optimize
incremental gains and keep losses to a minimum and have the discipline to apply in your
trading. 

Secondly, focus on market selection. There's such a wide array of tantalizing, enticing, and
irresistible trading products that opening the financial section of the paper is like walking into a
Las Vegas casino. You've got Leaps, Diamonds, Spiders, sector funds for everything, options on
everything, not to mention a pump and dumpers pushing a wide array of penny stocks. Instead of
thinking that you're going to find the Holy Grail that will trade any of these vehicles successfully,
you've got instead focus on identifying the small number of markets whose characteristics make
their behavior most predictable.

Finally, once you've got a handle on money management and market selection, then apply the
best trading techniques that you have available.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Rule 4: Always use Open Protective Stops (OPS)


An Open Protective Stop (OPS) is an open order to exit a long or short position should prices move against you to a specified price. OPS's act as insurance against an unusually large loss, though the actual fill price may be less favorable where fast moving markets squeeze liquidity or when, in futures, limit moves cease market trading before the OPS is executed.
Before you enter any order, always determine the maximum risk you want to take. I call this Theoretical Risk. Theoretical risk is the distance between your entry price and your OPS. As shown in Figure 1, if you get into a stock at 10 and place an OPS at 8, your theoretical risk is (10-8) = 2 points. Winning traders know it's important to not only use OPS's but also, position them so that the theoretical risk is kept at 2 percent of capital or less. For example, if you have a $1,000,000 account, you should only risk $20,000 per trade in a theoretical risk.

Rule 3: Understanding the Markets is Much More Important Than Methodology


Many traders are fixated on finding the Holy Grail, that is, a mechanical trading system or methodology which generates large and consistent profits with no discretionary judgment on the part of the trader.
Most traders who read this will deny they are looking for the Holy Grail, stating that they'd be happy with a mechanical system offering only a 60% win to loss ratio as opposed to the 80% to 90% that is claimed in many ads--as long as the system makes them a millionaire within a year to two.
I would, without hesitation, say that anybody in search of an enduringly profitable trading system that makes all your trading decisions for you is in search of the Holy Grail. In other words, such a money making machine simply does not exist.
But wait, you may say--"aren't all the highly successful traders in the world using some kind of unique methodology or system? Why can't I simply use the same exact approach they are and become just as successful?"
The answer is this: The markets are always changing. All trading strategies go through seasons of winning and losing. The key to long-term success is to understand the markets well enough so that you know how to adjust or switch strategies or even develop new ones in response to changing market conditions. Focus on systems and you may make money for awhile, but eventually you'll give it all back (and more). Focus on true understanding and you will be well on the way to consistent trading success.
What "Understanding" Is
You may wonder what I mean by "understanding." "Understanding" is the pot of gold that comes through your skills as a trader and on your ability to consistently find ways to limit your risks while participating in opportunities that have much more reward than the risk you are taking. It is the ability to see a strategy as nothing more than a tool and see when it's applicable and when it's not.
In short, the pot of gold does not lie in some system outside of yourself; it lies in the set of skills and degree of understanding and insight that you build within.
A True Story to Illustrate My Point
The Master Trader strives for understanding. The Novice Trader searches in vain for magical systems.
In closing this section, let me share a true story with you that will graphically illustrate my point:
In the mid-eighties, I met two traders who had attended a seminar by a very well known and reputable trader. These two traders did not know each other, but coincidentally, they both learned and applied the same system.
The first trader was the Novice Trader.
He began to trade the system in 1986 and was shocked at how much money he made. He was anxious to commit more capital to it, but wanted my opinion first. I back-tested the system and found that it had an identical performance to what was claimed in the seminar. However, I explained to this trader that I had three serious reservations. First, there was no stop-loss protection. Secondly, even though the system showed phenomenal gains in its four years of testing, that was not a sufficient time frame in which to evaluate the system properly. Third, the system was tested during a bull market. I didn't think it would perform well during a bear market.
To address these concerns, I suggested that the trader employ stop-losses and trend filters. This would have cut the total hypothetical profits during the four year testing period and hence, likely reduce future profits. The trader, however, did not heed my advice and left my office intending to continue trading the system "as is."
This trader's confidence in the system continued to build over the next several months as he made a fortune by racking up steady and consistent profits month after month. On October 17, 1987, the day of the great market crash, this trader was completely wiped out.
A few months later after the crash, I was talking to another trader. This trader was one I'd call a
Master Trader.
I found out that he had attended the same seminar spoken about above and that he had been exploiting the same strategy as the Novice Trader, but in contrast, he'd been successful using it, despite the 1987 crash.
I noticed that this trader had not taken the system's signals on October 27, nor during the entire October-November 1987 period. He explained to me anyone with a true understanding of the markets would not be applying the system during that period. He thought the system was good at identifying opportunities, but he'd only exploit them if he could limit risk with a stop-loss and in an upward trending market. That was not the case during that period.
The Novice Trader focused on the "system" and not "understanding the markets." In so
doing, he assumed that the system was infallible and he was not able to anticipate the market environment that would usher in the system's inevitable season of loss. The Novice Trader wanted to find a fishing hole where the fish were always biting.
The Master Trader was simply looking for ideas that help him increase his understanding.
He didn't consider what he learned at the seminar to be a "system", but rather, it was knowledge that he could use to find more low-risk, high reward opportunities. There was no way he would use it without fully understanding it so that he'd know the conditions under which it applied best and when it might not apply. The Master Trader was looking for another way to find a fishing hole where the fish might be biting for a while.
Winning traders seek to understand the markets and not to find magical systems.
Now let's move on to my more general money management rules.

Rule 2: Consistency is the Key

For most individual traders and investors, the single most important criteria for judging the performance of a trading methodology is total return. Consequently, when you look at ads selling trading systems and methodologies, you see a lot of wild claims of 80%, 100%, or even 300% average annual rate of return.
It's ironic that in talking to the vast majority of traders who've made their millions through trading, total return is the very last number they look at when judging the viability of a trading strategy. What matters more to this elite class of trader is risk, maximum draw-down, the duration of draw­downs, volatility, and a wide assortment of other risk-oriented benchmarks. Only when all their risk criteria is met do they consider total return.
The typical trader might wonder if these traders are just overly cautious and conservative. But that is simply not the case. As a whole, they are just as fanatical about the accumulation of wealth and financial freedom as anyone else who trades.
What has caused these traders to shift their focus to this winning strategy is that they've worked through the numbers. Doing so, they find:
Total return is only a valid measure of performance when risk is taken into consideration.
I credit my success as a money manager to my voracious study and practice of this concept. Let me show you a simple example that you may find surprising. Even though I use investment funds in my example, this concept I'm illustrating is directly applicable to all traders no matter how short-term their orientation is:
  1. Over the past 30 years, investment Fund A has returned 12 percent annually on average, has a strategy that is not dependent on any particular market doing well, and has had a 5 percent worst-case historical drawdown.
  2. Over the past 30 years, investment Fund B has returned 17 percent annually on average, has had performance highly correlated with U.S. stock indexes, and has had a 15 percent worst-cast historical drawdown (both investments are vastly superior to the S & P).
Which fund would you invest in?
Most traders and investors would be most attracted to Fund B, which showed greater total returns over the 30 year period. In justifying this they'd say: "I have no problem accepting a worst-case 15 percent hit because I'll come out ahead in the end. The extra protection in the Fund A doesn't help me that much.
Now--check this out. Most professional traders who understand the math would select Fund A. With the lower maximum drawdown, they would simply concentrate more fire power in Fund A by buying it on margin (putting 50 percent down). Doing this they were earn a 19 percent annual return after margin costs and sustain only a 10 percent expected drawdown risk, compared with a 17 percent return on Fund B with a 15 percent expected risk.
But there's even more to it.
The Smoke and Mirrors Behind Average Annual Returns
Whenever any trader, trading system vendor, or money manager brags about their performance in terms of Annual Average Return, they are--whether or not they know it--engaging in smoke and mirrors.
What is concealed in this statistic is the harm that is wreaked upon capital growth by drawdowns and losing streaks. In Rule #1, "Minimize Losses," we talked about how the difficulty of making up for a large trading loss is seemingly disproportionate to the magnitude of the error that caused the loss in the first place. That factors greatly into how much money you wind up making.
The real truth behind how much money you make is to be found in "Compounded Annual Return." That is, calculate your annual return by adding every gain and subtracting every loss that occurs during the course of a year. This is illustrated in the following table:
Let's consider the following table:


Year
Volatile
Returns Annual
Returns(%)
Principal
Dependable
Gains
Annual
Principal



Return (%)

1
21
1,210,000
18
1,180,000
2
35
1,6333,500
18
1,392,400
3
20
1,960,200
18
1,643,030
4
-26
1,450,500
18
1,938,780
5
32
1,914,720
18
2,287,760
6
12
1,347,450
18
2,699,560
7
42
3,045,170
18
3,185,480
8
-16
2,557,950
18
3,750,887
9
31
3,350,910
18
4,435,460
10
56
5,233,000
18
5,233,850
Average Annual Return = 20.7% Average Annual Return = 18%
Compound Annual Return = 17.98% Compound Annual Rate = 18%
As you can see, the fund that makes a steady 18% per year actually makes you more money than the one that posts spectacular gains eight out of ten years. The damage caused by the two losing years is quite evident.
Again, this example is applicable whether you are a day trader or a long-term investor.
The vast majority of trading strategies that boast spectacular gains, also take great risks. This means greater drawdowns and more volatile performance. To be successful as a trader, you must ignore the flashy statistics and work through the numbers. Evaluate your strategy by calculating on paper where your total trading equity would hypothetically be for every trade over a period of several years.
You will find that it is far, far better to use strategies that earn steady and consistent returns year after year after year. You will inevitably find that the annual returns of these strategies are far less spectacular than those that are widely advertised, but the math makes it clear that you are far more likely to be laughing your way to the bank this way.
Oh yes, you'll sleep better at night now. For successful traders, consistency is the key.

Money Management: The Real Holy Grail


Money Management: The Real Holy Grail
Fellow Traders:
A key component to successful trading is proper money management.
Traders, in general, spend far too much time and effort trying to find magical systems or methodologies that produce high returns, rather than increasing their understanding of the markets and using astute money management to apply what they learn.
I agree with Stanley Kroll who once said:
"It is better to have a mediocre system and good money management than an excellent system and poor money management."
In this first week of our 10-week course, I'm going to teach you everything I've learned about the discipline of money management in the past 17 years of trading and fund management. You'll not only review some familiar rules, but also learn about some powerful principles that go way beyond just cutting your losses short and letting your profits run. Even though these principles can make you a lot of money, I doubt that you'll hear very many fund managers or system vendors talking about them in their ads because they know that the public is drawn toward glitzy performance numbers--not risk control.
But, if you want to know the real truth about what it takes to be a successful trader, be assured that I won’t pull any punches.
Now let's get started. The first three rules are what I consider to be the most important. Without them, everything falls apart. I consider them to be the very foundation my success as a trader.
The first one is:
As simple as it sounds, failure to keep losses small is the #1 reason why most traders blow out early in the game. That almost happened to me, in fact.
When I first started trading, I bought call options on gold stocks right before the big explosion in Gold prices in 1979. In less than a year I made 500% on my money. I thought I knew everything. But then my real education started.
In 1981, I got caught short Orange Juice during a series of limit-up moves that lasted more than a week. By the time I exited, I had lost nearly half of my account. It was at this point that I realized the importance of limiting my losses.
Very few traders understand the mathematics of losses and risk. But I believe that just understanding the following concept can turn a losing trader into a winning one because it can help you to focus on doing the right things and turn you away from the wrong things.
Here is the concept that I strongly suggest you chew on for awhile:
When you lose money in trading, you wind up having less capital to work with. Therefore, to make back what you lost you have to earn a substantially higher percentage return than what you lost.
Example: If you make a series of bad trades and your account drops 70% in value, you will not get back to your break-even point until you have made over 230% on your remaining money!
That doesn't sound fair does it? You'd think that if your account dropped 70%, you'd be at the break-even point again when you've made 70%. Sorry, but this is not reality. A trader who loses 20% or more must show a return of 30% to make up for the loss. It can take a year or more for even the best traders I know to produce such a return.
This is one of the principles that keeps many losing traders from digging themselves out of the hole they've dug for themselves. They lose a big chunk of money and, even if their skill improves, they are not able to recover unless they add more money to their trading account--usually from their hard-earned paychecks or credit cards.
As I studied the qualities of successful traders, the concept of weighing risk and reward hit home. Trading performance meant more to me than just shooting for big gains; it meant looking closely at the risks I was willing to take to make those gains.
Indeed, as I studied the qualities that the most successful traders have in common, I noticed that most strived to keep their draw-downs to around 20% to 30% or less.
When you trade, you always have to be conscious of the dangers of suffering big losses. You not only lose the money, but you also have the potential to be knocked out of the game permanently. Realizing this will produce a fear in you that I assure you will be quite healthy. That fear will help you to remember to keep your position sizes small and to apply trailing stops religiously.
Winning traders minimize losses.

Money Management


Money Management
How much do you know about Money Management?
As we begin the course, I thought it would be fun and informative to start this week's topic with a short quiz. The purpose of this is to help you to evaluate your strengths and weaknesses so that you know exactly what issues you have to concentrate the most on. Are you ready? Let's go!
Begin the quiz
1. It's important to use a stop-loss the vast majority of the time. But
there are certain market conditions under which you should not use a
stop-loss. Which of the following are they:
  1. None of the above The correct answer is: e) None of the above. You should use stop-losses no matter what. Find out why in Rules 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6.
2. If I made a series of bad trades and my account losses 70% of its
value, I have to show a return of how much before I get back to break­
even?
The correct answer is: d) 230%
Large losses can have a devastating affect on your recovery ability. That's why it's important to never have them in the first place.
Find out more about this in Rules 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6.
3. True or False: If a trading strategy has earned an average annual
return of 120%, it's average maximum drawdown is irrelevant because
no matter how large it is, the strategy will always make up for it.
The correct answer is: False.
Drawdown is always important and can affect your profit potential dramatically no matter what the "average total return" is.
Find out more about this in Rules 1, 2, and 3.
4. The world's most successful traders do which of the following most
often:
The correct answer is: b). The world's most successful traders trade in the direction of trends in the strongest or weakest markets.
Find out more about this in Rules 12, 13, 16, and 17.
Next Question
5. True or False: A stock's fundamentals (or business outlook) are irrelevant to short-term traders. That is, a short-term trader should only look at technical factors when deciding whether or not to take a trade, not a company's balance sheet
The answer is False.
Find out more about this in Money Management Rule 3, Trade With Fuel on Your Side
6. If you want to improve your results as a trader, your main goal should be which one of the following:
It is most important to understand the markets so that no matter what happens, you'll know what trading strategies work and which don't work. Find out more about this in Money Management Rule 3.
7. Take a look at the following table:


Year
Trader A Annual Returns(%)
Trader B
Annual
Returns (%)
1
21
18
2
35
18
3
20
18
4
-26
18
5
32
18
6
12
18
7
42
18
8
-16
18
9
31
18
10
56
18
Trader A: Average Annual Return = 20.7% Trader B: Average Annual Return = 18%
Which trader made the most money by the 10th year?
Trader B made more money. Find out why in Money Management Rule 2.
That's it for the questions. I hope you found this quiz enjoyable. Now let's get started and learn more about Money Management.

TOP TRADING BROKER COMPANIES INDIA

There has always been a keen demand for service providers for stock trading.  Traders heavily rely on best companies who can go out of the way to help traders manage their trades.  The following list of tasks is very important as far as service is concerned :-

Payment transfer and information time
Trading Software related issues
Technical support
Responsibility information

The list of Responsible companies is as follows :
1. Edelweiss
2. Ventura

I will update more companies after investing their services.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

The CORE BASICS

Trading is an art of Minimizing the Losses especially the intraday.  You cant fight the market.  Market can do anything, anytime.  Trader is powerless he cant change the market to do whatever he wants.  A successful intraday trader always trade according to the market.  He waits for the successful trades like  a tiger in a jungle.  In the meantime he minimise his capital loss (tiger preserving the energy).  There are always many times when the market throw profitable trades on you, provided you are trading to the Core Basics.

You will be successful and profitable trader over a period of time only if you got the art of minimizing and protecting your capital.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Setting and accomplishing realistic goals

  • Goal must be realistic -  This means that goal has to be something that is within your capabilities. It may be possible to make a million dollars first year, but its probably not very realistic because it isnot within your capabilities yet.
  • Goal must be attainable - If you are trying to make 500/- a day, you have a much better chance of being able to reach that goal versus the goal to make a million dollars this year.  Start with a smallest goal and make it big slowly.
  • Goal must be measurable - Everybody wants to get rich in the market. But that isnot really a goal.  You must be able to know when you are far  away, close and when you have achieved your particular goal.  
  • Above all these goals must be written, visually seen by you throughout the day (pictures).

KEEP IT SIMPLE

WELL ORGANISED COMPUTER SCREEN AND OTHER AREAS OF OUR LIFE.

MAIN FOLDERS SHOULD BE CLEARLY DEFINED FOR DIFFERENT PURPOSES LIKE
STOCK, REAL ESTATE, BLOGS ADVERTISEMENTS.  BECAUSE CATEGORISATION ALWAYS SAVES TIME AND EFFORTS.  ALWAYS KEEP LIFE SIMPLE AND EASY.

What market makers doesnt want you to know

Intraday trading time for one trade should be 1 to 10 min max.  Intraday trading is very different from investing.  It is based on taking small profits at short durations.  Like cricket there is a saying of making singles and tows.  In the game of cricket 1-2 are the most important runs that makes up the whole total.  Take your small profits and well as losses quickly.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Topics Stock Market News, Holidays, Prediction, Most Popular News, Share Market Basics,

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

The Unbeatable Strategies

Here I present an unbeatable strategy to take profit in short periods

Buy 10 of ABC  at 100

Apply first Stop Loss of 20 at 99.75

Apply second Stop Loss of 30 at 99.50

Apply third Stop Loss of 50 at 99.10

Buy 10 of AC at 100
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.10
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.05
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.10
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.15
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.20
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.25
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.30
Buy 10 of ABC at 100.35


Now 
sell 10 of ABC at 100.65

sell 10 of ABC at 100.70
sell 10 of ABC at 100.75
sell 10 of ABC at 100.85
sell 10 of ABC at 100.90
sell 10 of ABC at 100.95
sell 10 of ABC at 101

A repeated trend will be repeated here then increase the qty for quick better profit. (Visualization)

NOTE :-
1. Always sell less than bought quantity i.e. if buy qty = 100 then at any given time sell qty should be less than 70%
2. Because the upper momentum is unlimited in case of long positions.
3. Repeat the same in opposite momentum i.e. in case of short positions buy less than 70% and get profited from steep unexpected downtrend.
4. We cant  cover both sides.

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Basic Terminology of Share Market (Hindi)



Stock: The stock or capital stock of a business entity represents the original capital paid into or invested in the business by its promoters. The "Stock" of a Business is divided into "Shares".
Share: A part of the company or enterprise issues to public or private to rise Money for various future plans, Holders of shares can sell their holdings to others through Stock exchanges.
Equity: The value of an ownership interest in property or "Business", Generic term for "Equity" securities are called stock.
Market: A place of a variety of different systems, institutions, procedures, social relations and infrastructures whereby persons trade, goods and services are exchanged. It is an arrangement that allows buyers and sellers to exchange things or services is called as "Market".
Multibagger: Among the long-term investors "Multibagger" is a popular term. A stock with strong fundamental values to show best performance in future to increase "Investor" wealth.
Investment: Investment is the commitment of "Capital" or "Money" to purchase financial instruments / assets to gain profitable returns in the form of income, interest, dividend, or appreciation of the value of the money. In equity terms can yield price appreciation, dividend, Bonus shares, Face value(par value) split, De-mergers or any value increase.
Trade: The exchange of goods, services, or both, In the words of "Finance" a deal between buyer and seller of financial instruments.
Derivatives: Meaning of "Derivatives" is a financial instrument, an agreement between two people or two parties. It is a financial contract with a value linked to the expected future price of the share or a currency, notable kinds of derivatives are "Futures and Options".
Economy: Financial activities related to the production and distribution of goods and services in a country or particular geographic region or entire network of producers, distributors, and consumers of goods and services in a local or national level.
Demat Account: In India, refers to a dematerialized account(Demat), For individual Indian citizens to trade in listed stocks.The Securities Exchange Board of India (SEBI) requires the investors to maintain a "Demat" Account. In a demat account shares and securities are held in electronic form instead of paper certificates. A Demat Account is opened by the investor while registering with an investment broker (Stock Broker) or sub broker.
Stockbroker: A regulated professional broker who buys and sells shares and other financial securities through market makers or Agency Firms on behalf of Investors and Traders. A broker may be works to a brokerage firm. Other words an agent charges a fee or commission for executing buy and sell orders submitted by an investor.
Brokerage: Definition of "Brokerage" gives different meanings, First one is A firm engaged in buying and selling of stocks for clients, The business or Office of a broker. Second one is Fee or Charge or Commission paid to broker. stock brokers charges a fee to act as intermediary between buyer and seller.
Intraday: Complete trade process of Buy and Sell or Sell and Buy within single trading day, It means square off the open positions before market close.
Swing Trading:  "Swing Trading" is purely non intraday based at the same time not for long-term, Purely short-term means more than one day to within some weeks and profit-book at Trend reversal. Swing trading is commonly considered as a speculative activity in financial markets including Forex, Stocks, Derivatives, Commodity, etc.
เคฌुเคจिเคฏाเคฆी เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคฌाเคœाเคฐ เค•ी เคถเคฌ्เคฆाเคตเคฒी
เคถेเคฏเคฐ: เคเค• เคต्เคฏเคตเคธाเคฏ เค‡เค•ाเคˆ เค•े เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคฏा เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคชूंเคœी เคฎूเคฒ เคชूंเคœी เคฎें เคญुเค—เคคाเคจ เค•िเคฏा เคนै เคฏा เค‡เคธเค•े เคช्เคฐเคฎोเคŸเคฐों เคฆ्เคตाเคฐा เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ เคฎें เคจिเคตेเคถ เค•ा เคช्เคฐเคคिเคจिเคงिเคค्เคต เค•เคฐเคคा เคนै. เคเค• เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ เค•े "เคธ्เคŸॉเค•" "เคถेเคฏเคฐ" เคฎें เคตिเคญाเคœिเคค เคนै.
เคธाเคा เค•เคฐें: เค•ंเคชเคจी เคฏा เค‰เคฆ्เคฏเคฎ เคฎुเคฆ्เคฆों เค•ी เคเค• เคธाเคฐ्เคตเคœเคจिเค• เคฏा เคจिเคœी เคญाเค— เคตिเคญिเคจ्เคจ เคญเคตिเคท्เคฏ เค•ी เคฏोเคœเคจाเค“ं เค•े เคฒिเค เคงเคจ เคฎें เคตृเคฆ्เคงि เค•เคฐเคจे เค•े เคฒिเค, เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคงाเคฐเค•ों เค•ी เค…เคชเคจी เคนिเคธ्เคธेเคฆाเคฐी เคธ्เคŸॉเค• เคเค•्เคธเคšेंเคœों เค•े เคฎाเคง्เคฏเคฎ เคธे เคฆूเคธเคฐों เค•ो เคฌेเคš เคธเค•เคคे เคนैं.
เค‡เค•्เคตिเคŸी: เคธंเคชเคค्เคคि เคฏा "เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ", "เค‡เค•्เคตिเคŸी 'เค•เคฐ เคฐเคนे เคนैं เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคช्เคฐเคคिเคญूเคคिเคฏों เค•े เคฒिเค เค•เคนा เคœाเคคा เคนै เคธाเคฎाเคจ्เคฏ เคธเคฎเคฏ เคฎें เคเค• เคธ्เคตाเคฎिเคค्เคต เคนिเคค เค•े เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏ.
เคฌाเคœाเคฐ: เคตिเคญिเคจ्เคจ เคช्เคฐเคฃाเคฒिเคฏों, เคธंเคธ्เคฅाเค“ं, เคช्เคฐเค•्เคฐिเคฏाเค“ं, เคธाเคฎाเคœिเค• เคธंเคฌंเคงों เค”เคฐ เค•ी เคเค• เค•िเคธ्เคฎ เค•ी เคเค• เคœเค—เคน เคนै infrastructures เคœिเคธเคธे เคฒोเค—ों เค•ो เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ, เคฎाเคฒ เค”เคฐ เคธेเคตाเค“ं เคตिเคฎเคฐ्เคถ เค•เคฐ เคฐเคนे เคนैं. เคฏเคน เคเค• เคต्เคฏเคตเคธ्เคฅा เคนै เค•ि เค…เคจुเคฎเคคि เคฆेเคคा เคนै เค–เคฐीเคฆाเคฐ เค”เคฐ เคตिเคจिเคฎเคฏ เคšीเคœों เคฏा เคธेเคตाเค“ं เค•ो เคฌेเคšเคจे เค•े เคฐूเคช เคฎें "เคฌाเคœाเคฐ" เค•เคนा เคœाเคคा เคนै.

Multibagger:
เคฒंเคฌी เค…เคตเคงि เค•े เคจिเคตेเคถเค•ों เค•े เคฌीเคš เคเค• เคฒोเค•เคช्เคฐिเคฏ เคถเคฌ्เคฆ "Multibagger เคนै." เคฎเคœเคฌूเคค เคฌुเคจिเคฏाเคฆी เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏों เค•े เคธाเคฅ เคเค• เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคญเคตिเคท्เคฏ เคฎें เค…เคš्เค›ा เคช्เคฐเคฆเคฐ्เคถเคจ เคฆिเค–ाเคจे เค•े เคฒिเค "เค‡เคจ्เคตेเคธ्เคŸเคฐ" เคงเคจ เคฎें เคตृเคฆ्เคงि.
เคจिเคตेเคถ: เคจिเคตेเคถ เค•े "เคฐाเคœเคงाเคจी" เคฏा "เคชैเคธा" เค•ा เคช्เคฐเคคिเคฌเคฆ्เคงเคคा เค•े เคฒिเค เคตिเคค्เคคीเคฏ เคธाเคงเคจों / เคธंเคชเคค्เคคि เค–เคฐीเคฆ เค•เคฐเคจे เค•े เคฒिเค เค†เคฏ, เคฌ्เคฏाเคœ, เคฒाเคญांเคถ, เคชैเคธे เค•े เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏ เค•ा เคฏा เคช्เคฐเคถंเคธा เค•े เคฐूเคช เคฎें เคฒाเคญเคฆाเคฏเค• เคฐिเคŸเคฐ्เคจ เคนाเคธिเคฒ เคนै. เค‡เค•्เคตिเคŸी เคฎें เคถเคฌ्เคฆों เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏ เคตृเคฆ्เคงि, เคฒाเคญांเคถ, เคฌोเคจเคธ เคถेเคฏเคฐ เค‰เคชเคœ, (เคฌเคฐाเคฌเคฐ เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏ) เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏ เคตिเคญाเคœเคจ, de-เคตिเคฒเคฏ เคฏा เค•िเคธी เคญी เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏ เคตृเคฆ्เคงि เค•ा เคธाเคฎเคจा เค•เคฐ เคธเค•เคคे เคนैं.
เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ: เคฎाเคฒ, เคธेเคตाเค“ं, เคฏा เคฆोเคจों เค•े เค–เคฐीเคฆाเคฐ เค”เคฐ เคตिเคค्เคคीเคฏ เคธाเคงเคจों เค•े เคตिเค•्เคฐेเคคा เค•े เคฌीเคš เคเค• เคธौเคฆा "เคตिเคค्เคค" เค•े เคถเคฌ्เคฆों เคฎें, เคตिเคจिเคฎเคฏ.
เคกेเคฐिเคตेเคŸिเคต: เค•े "เคธंเคœाเคค" เคฎเคคเคฒเคฌ เคเค• เคตिเคค्เคคीเคฏ เคธाเคงเคจ เคนै, เคฆो เคฒोเค—ों เค•ो เคฏा เคฆो เคชเค•्เคทों เค•े เคฌीเคš เคเค• เคธเคฎเคौเคคा เคนै. เคฏเคน เคเค• เคนिเคธ्เคธा เคนै เคฏा เคเค• เคฎुเคฆ्เคฐा เค•े เคฎूเคฒ्เคฏ เค•ी เค‰เคฎ्เคฎीเคฆ เคญเคตिเคท्เคฏ เคธे เคœुเคก़ा เคนुเค† เคฎाเคจ เค•े เคธाเคฅ เคเค• เคตिเคค्เคคीเคฏ เค…เคจुเคฌंเคง เคนै, เคกेเคฐिเคตेเคŸिเคต เค•े เค‰เคฒ्เคฒेเค–เคจीเคฏ เคช्เคฐเค•ाเคฐ "เคตाเคฏเคฆा เค”เคฐ เคตिเค•เคฒ्เคช" เคนैं.
เค…เคฐ्เคฅเคต्เคฏเคตเคธ्เคฅा: เคตिเคค्เคคीเคฏ เค”เคฐ เคเค• เคฆेเคถ เคฏा เคตिเคถेเคท เคญौเค—ोเคฒिเค• เค•्เคทेเคค्เคฐ เคฏा เคจिเคฐ्เคฎाเคคाเค“ं, เคตिเคคเคฐเค•ों เค•े เคชूเคฐे เคจेเคŸเคตเคฐ्เค• เคฎें เคฎाเคฒ เค”เคฐ เคธेเคตाเค“ं เค•े เคตिเคคเคฐเคฃ เค•े เค‰เคค्เคชाเคฆเคจ เคธे เคธंเคฌंเคงिเคค เค—เคคिเคตिเคงिเคฏों, เคเค• เคธ्เคฅाเคจीเคฏ เคฏा เคฐाเคท्เคŸ्เคฐीเคฏ เคธ्เคคเคฐ เคฎें เค”เคฐ เคฎाเคฒ เค”เคฐ เคธेเคตाเค“ं เค•े เค‰เคชเคญोเค•्เคคाเค“ं.
เคกीเคฎैเคŸ เค–ाเคคा: เคญाเคฐเคค เคฎें, เคเค• เคกीเคฎैเคŸ เค–ाเคคे (เคกीเคฎेเคŸ) เค•ो เคธंเคฆเคฐ्เคญिเคค เค•เคฐเคคा เคนै, เคต्เคฏเค•्เคคि เคญाเคฐเคคीเคฏ เคจाเค—เคฐिเค• เค•े เคฒिเค เค•े เคฒिเค เคธूเคšीเคฌเคฆ्เคง stocks.The เคญाเคฐเคคीเคฏ เคช्เคฐเคคिเคญूเคคि เคตिเคจिเคฎเคฏ เคฌोเคฐ्เคก (เคธेเคฌी) เคฎें เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ เคจिเคตेเคถเค•ों เค•ो เคเค• "เคกीเคฎैเคŸ" เค–ाเคคा เคฌเคจाเค เคฐเค–เคจे เค•े เคฒिเค เค•ी เค†เคตเคถ्เคฏเค•เคคा เคนै. เคกीเคฎैเคŸ เค–ाเคคे เคฎें เคถेเคฏเคฐों เค”เคฐ เคช्เคฐเคคिเคญूเคคिเคฏों เค•ाเค—เคœ เคช्เคฐเคฎाเคฃ เคชเคค्เคฐ เค•े เคฌเคœाเคฏ เค‡เคฒेเค•्เคŸ्เคฐॉเคจिเค• เคฐूเคช เคฎें เค†เคฏोเคœिเคค เค•ी เคœाเคคी เคนैं. เคเค• เคกीเคฎैเคŸ เค–ाเคคा เคจिเคตेเคถเค• เคฆ्เคตाเคฐा เค–ोเคฒा เคนै, เคœเคฌเค•ि เคเค• เคจिเคตेเคถ เคฆเคฒाเคฒ (เคธ्เคŸॉเค• เคฌ्เคฐोเค•เคฐ) เคฏा เค‰เคช เคฆเคฒाเคฒ เค•े เคธाเคฅ เคฆเคฐ्เคœ เค•ी เค—เคˆ.
เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคฆเคฒाเคฒ: เคเค• เคตिเคจिเคฏเคฎिเคค เคชेเคถेเคตเคฐ เคฆเคฒाเคฒ เค•ौเคจ เค–เคฐीเคฆเคคा เคนै เค”เคฐ เคฌाเคœाเคฐ เคจिเคฐ्เคฎाเคคाเค“ं เคฏा เคเคœेंเคธी เคซเคฐ्เคฎ เค•े เคฎाเคง्เคฏเคฎ เคธे เคจिเคตेเคถเค•ों เค”เคฐ เคŸ्เคฐेเคกเคฐ्เคธ เค•ी เค“เคฐ เคธे เคถेเคฏเคฐ เค”เคฐ เค…เคจ्เคฏ เคตिเคค्เคคीเคฏ เคช्เคฐเคคिเคญूเคคिเคฏां เคฌेเคšเคคा เคนै. เคเค• เคฆเคฒाเคฒ เคเค• เคฌ्เคฐोเค•เคฐेเคœ เคซเคฐ्เคฎ เค•े เคฒिเค เค•ाเคฎ เค•เคฐเคคा เคนै เคนो เคธเค•เคคा เคนै. เคฆूเคธเคฐे เคถเคฌ्เคฆों เคเค• เคเคœेंเคŸ เค•ो เค•्เคฐिเคฏाเคจ्เคตिเคค เค–เคฐीเคฆเคจे เค•े เคฒिเค เค”เคฐ เคเค• เคจिเคตेเคถเค• เคฆ्เคตाเคฐा เคช्เคฐเคธ्เคคुเคค เค†เคฆेเคถ เค•ो เคฌेเคšเคจे เค•े เคฒिเค เคเค• เคถुเคฒ्เค• เคฏा เค•เคฎीเคถเคจ เคฒेเคคा เคนै.
เคฌ्เคฐोเค•เคฐेเคœ: เคเค• เคธเคฌเคธे เคชเคนเคฒे, เค•े 'เคฌ्เคฐोเค•เคฐेเคœ "เค•ी เคชเคฐिเคญाเคทा เค…เคฒเค— เค…เคฒเค— เค…เคฐ्เคฅ เคฆेเคคा เคนै เคเค• เค–เคฐीเคฆ เค”เคฐ เค—्เคฐाเคนเค•ों, เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ เคฏा เคเค• เคฆเคฒाเคฒ เค•े เค•ाเคฐ्เคฏाเคฒเคฏ เค•े เคฒिเค เคถेเคฏเคฐों เค•ी เคฌिเค•्เคฐी เคฎें เคฒเค—ी เคซเคฐ्เคฎ เคนै. เคฆूเคธเคฐा เคเค• เคนै เคถुเคฒ्เค• เคฏा เคถुเคฒ्เค• เคฏा เค•เคฎीเคถเคจ เคฆเคฒाเคฒ เค•เคฐเคจे เค•े เคฒिเค เคญुเค—เคคाเคจ เค•िเคฏा. เคถेเคฏเคฐ เคฆเคฒाเคฒों เค•े เคฒिเค เคเค• เค–เคฐीเคฆाเคฐ เค”เคฐ เคตिเค•्เคฐेเคคा เค•े เคฌीเคš เคฎเคง्เคฏเคธ्เคฅ เค•े เคฐूเคช เคฎें เค•ाเคฐ्เคฏ เคถुเคฒ्เค• เคฒेเคคा เคนै.

Intraday:
เคชूเคฐा เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ เค•ी เคช्เคฐเค•्เคฐिเคฏा เค–เคฐीเคฆें เค”เคฐ เคฌेเคšें เคฌेเคšें เค”เคฐ เคเค• เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐिเค• เคฆिเคจ เค•े เคญीเคคเคฐ เค–เคฐीเคฆें, เคฏเคน เคฌाเคœाเคฐ เค•ो เคฌंเคฆ เค•เคฐเคจे เคธे เคชเคนเคฒे เค–ुเคฒे เคธ्เคฅाเคจों เคฌंเคฆ เคตเคฐ्เค— เค•ा เคฎเคคเคฒเคฌ เคนै.
เคธ्เคตिंเค— เคŸ्เคฐेเคกिंเค—: "เค˜ुเคฎाเค“ เคŸ्เคฐेเคกिंเค—" เคตिเคถुเคฆ्เคง เคฐूเคช เคธे เคฒंเคฌी เค…เคตเคงि, เคตिเคถुเคฆ्เคง เคฐूเคช เคธे เค…เคฒ्เคชเค•ाเคฒिเค• เค•ुเค› เคฐुเคाเคจ เคชเคฒเคŸเคจे เคชเคฐ เค”เคฐ เคฒाเคญ เค•िเคคाเคฌ เคนเคซ्เคคों เค•े เคญीเคคเคฐ เค•เคฐเคจे เค•े เคฒिเค เคเค• เคฆिเคจ เคธे เค…เคงिเค• เค•ा เค…เคฐ्เคฅ เคนै เค•े เคฒिเค เค—ैเคฐ เคเค• เคนी เคธเคฎเคฏ เคฎें เค†เคงाเคฐिเคค เคจเคนीं intraday เคนै. เคธ्เคตिंเค— เคต्เคฏाเคชाเคฐ เคธाเคฎाเคจ्เคฏเคคः เคตिเคค्เคคीเคฏ เคฌाเคœाเคฐों เคฎें เคเค• เคธเคŸ्เคŸा เคตिเคฆेเคถी เคฎुเคฆ्เคฐा, เคธ्เคŸॉเค•्เคธ, เคธंเคœाเคค, เคœिเคจ्เคธ, เค†เคฆि เคธเคนिเคค เค—เคคिเคตिเคงि เค•े เคฐूเคช เคฎें เคฎाเคจा เคœाเคคा เคนै