Well you can learn from your own experience or pay someone to teach you. But let me warn you when I first started trading I lost about 10k in bogus trading programs that taught me nothing, there main purpose for the free and paid seminars was to sell me their trading software. I would have rather lost that 10k from my own trading mistakes and could have learned more from that. Be careful who you do business with.
A prop trader is someone that is trading someone else's money, "the firm," and typically making commissions on the profitable trades they make. A day trader is someone who buys securities and sells them in the same day. Intra-day trading is a term also used. A prop trader can be a day-trader if that is the firm or the individuals trading style.
You do not need any special degrees to become a day trader. You do, however, need to do a lot of trend research.
Then you end up holding it over night, however some brokers have regulations on how much stock you can hold overnight in a day trading account. Check out the free videos below to learn more about this: http://www.tradingapples.com/beginning-trader-training-seri/
Yes you can. Refer to the "Long vs Short" free video at the link below: http://www.tradingapples.com/beginning-trader-training-seri/
There are several websites that one can learn about day stock trading. These websites include Master Trader, Rightline, Pristine, Investopedia, and Wikipedia.
In order to day trade you simply start trading stock in high volume. You can learn how to be a day trader on the following site: http://www.tradestocksamerica.com/day-trader.php.
A day trader is a trader who buys and sells financial instruments (eg stocks, options, futures, derivatives, currencies) within the same trading day such that all positions will usually be closed before the market close of the trading day. - An institutional day trader is a trader who works for a financial institution. - A retail day trader is a trader who works for himself, or in partnership with a few other traders. A retail trader generally trades with his own capital, though he may also trade with other people's money. A proprietary trader ("prop trader") is a trader who trades securities on the account of the institution he/she works for, not for client-based business.
It is basically supply and demand. If you are good at economics or an economics major it makes the most sense. I took a free course at this site that helped me greatly: http://www.tradingapples.com/beginning-trader-training-seri/
Yes, Trader Joe in Sunnyvale is open on labor day.
To learn more about copper's future you can talk to a commodities trader or an investment trader to get their opinion on how the price of copper will fare in the future.
MT 941 is balance report
MT 941 is balance report