IT's over!: In Day Trading, Less Thrill and More Chill
            By DIANA B. HENRIQUES
                 ere was a trace of eulogy in the young day trader's voice as he                reflected on how different the world looked after April, a month in           which once-sizzling Internet stocks began a steep slide that cut the           sector's value by at least 20 percent in just nine weeks. 
            "I have come to grips with           the fact that it's never going           to be as good as it was," said           John Cassimatis, 27, who           has been trading Internet           stocks exclusively ever since           they became the dream           machines for the would-be           rich last year. "But I'm just           grateful to have been a part           of it." 
            Cassimatis is one of an           estimated 4,000 to 5,000           amateur investors -- mostly men, mostly young -- who have flocked to           more than a hundred specialized trading rooms around the country to try           their hands at buying and selling stocks quickly for their own profit. 
            Since early last year, their role in the market has assumed an almost           mythical quality. Some regulators worry that these new players, who           have shown a special affinity for Internet stocks, are being lured toward           the rocks with siren songs of instant wealth, while others blame them for           causing thin, rumor-driven markets to become so turbulent that less agile           investors are drowning. 
            Like many at-home investors who trade on line, day traders were drawn           to the Internet stocks by their volatility and triple-digit gains, and for           many of them, trading in the months before the spring selloff was like           breaking the bank on some high-tech video poker machine. Is that time,           however, gone for good? And has the cruelty of April left these new           market players wary, wiped out or disillusioned? 
            Interviews with self-employed traders across the country suggest that the           Internet slump, however brief, has indeed planted a few doubts in this           preternaturally optimistic community. Managers at brokerage firms           catering to day traders report that in the early weeks of the selloff, there           were fewer new customers, while existing customers were trading less           actively. 
            And like Cassimatis, many young traders said they did not expect the           near-term future of the Internet sector to look like its glorious pre-April           past. 
            But a few more experienced voices predicted that this new-found caution           would be forgotten quickly if Internet stocks, which have regained about           half the ground lost in the April slide, move past their pre-slump highs. 
            "I think greed is built in," said Eyal Shahar, 38, a trader who manages the           Irvine, Calif., branch of Momentum Securities in Houston, the largest of           the day-trading brokerage houses. Trading Internet stocks is something           "only the very good traders should get into," he said, "because you can           lose so much so fast, before you learn how to trade." But, he added, "in           most cases, they need to experience it in their own skin before they           learn." 
            Day traders try to make money by exploiting the minute-to-minute,           hour-to-hour movements in specific volatile stocks. And nowhere has           their impact been felt more keenly than in Internet stocks, a tiny corner of           the market until the fall of 1997, when Yahoo began to attract their           hair-trigger attentions. 
            The sector then comprised only a few companies, each with only a few           million shares available in the market. As enthusiasm for the stocks           spread, demand for shares quickly outstripped the supply. And the           resulting price gains of the newborn dot-com stocks became the stuff of           legend. 
                 ne young day trader ticked off the milestones, starting with the                date that seemed to capture all that was magical about the Internet           craze: April 9, 1998, when Yahoo announced its earnings, opened $8           higher, paused and then began a noontime rally that carried it up another           $8, for a total gain of $16, or 16 percent, on tremendous volume. 
            "That started it," said Kirk Kazazian, 23, who has been day trading since           receiving his bachelor's degree in finance at the University of           Pennsylvania in 1996 and now trades with Tradescape in Manhattan. He           rattled off the ticker symbols of tiny stocks he had held onto for brief but           steep climbs. "Everything started in April," he said. "That was my best           month." 
            In late summer of 1998, of course, Internet stocks were caught in a           wholesale market panic prompted by the Russian debt default. But by           November, they were showing resilience. On the day before           Thanksgiving, "things really started to fly," Kazazian recalled. And by           February of this year, Internet stocks were moving into the thin           stratosphere of pure euphoria. 
            "I guess we were both catching the wave and causing it," Kazazian           reflected recently. "There weren't but about 30 or 40 stocks. So we'd           start bidding them up, and then people at home would see it going up,           and they'd bid it up higher." 
            He added: "It's not just us. Everyone wants to get into it and make a fast           buck." 
            Consider one stock popular among day traders: Theglobe.com. The big           money on this unseasoned Web-site operator was made last Nov. 13,           when its newly minted shares made their debut at seven times their           offering price of $4.50, adjusted for a subsequent split. But in the           post-April slump this year, the stock plummeted from nearly $40 to less           than $14 -- a fairly typical performance in the sector. It now trades at           $17.875. 
            Many day traders emphasized that a declining market could still produce           profits, so long as it remained volatile and a trader had more current data           and quicker order execution than online brokerage customers could           obtain from their home or office computers. On a recent day when           Theglobe.com closed lower, for example, there were several points at           which a sharp-eyed trader could have pocketed 25 cents a share by           buying at one momentary low price and quickly selling at a slightly higher           one. 
            The excitement and challenge of such trades           are what attract many investors to the trading           rooms. Arthur E. Herrmann, 27, first           experienced that thrill from the sidelines when           he worked as a summer intern for a specialist           firm on the floor of the American Stock           Exchange. Now, he says, "this is my career."           He usually trades at a Manhattan office of           Tradescape, which merged recently with           Momentum Securities but for now continues           in business under the Tradescape name. But           he visits other branches, too. 
            "I trade light and fast and generally go out           flat," he explained in the patois of the           day-trading world. 
            In translation, that means he buys a relatively small number of shares,           holds them for an extremely short period and ends the day with nothing           but cash in his portfolio. 
            Herrmann said he doesn't worry much about where the Internet stocks           are heading -- if they cool, he said, he'll play in another neighborhood.           Nevertheless, he senses a mood change -- though it might be only           seasonal. "It has been a really crazy time, and now it's summertime, and           people are probably just going to be more laid-back for a while," he said.
            For Herrmann, the real casualty of the post-April slump was the initial           public offering game. 
            "I have tended to stay away from the I.P.O. action lately," he said. "It is           too much of a frenzy." 
            What would it take to bring him back? "I would need another           Theglobe.com," he said with a laugh. 
                 eter C. Earle, an executive vice president of On-Line Investment                Services, allowed a reporter to visit On-Line's day-trading room           near the rehabilitated waterfront in Jersey City, N.J., on the condition that           his customers' last names not be used -- "in the interests of maintaining           their privacy." 
            It is an environment that gives "business casual" a new dimension --           sandals, shorts and rumpled T-shirts were the office uniform -- but the           technology is up to the minute, and more than a dozen customers were           busy trading on a recent afternoon. 
            One of them was Brian, 28, who played drums in a band and managed a           sporting goods store in Boston before gravitating to day trading more           than two years ago. 
            As he tells it, he started with $50,000, lost money for six weeks and           broke even for six months. Finally he began to build an account that now           allows him to trade as much as $250,000 of stock at a time. 
            Like Herrmann, he cashes out at the closing bell and does not hold           stocks overnight. 
            "In the old days, it was free money," he said, reflecting on the pre-April           paradise. "There's a lot more nervousness now." 
            He added, "Everyone in the room has been wondering how to handle           this." His own trading style has been affected by the current mood, he           said. 
            "I'm trying to be more picky, more selective -- which I think everyone,           across the board, has been trying to do," he said. 
            John, 29, comes in early, usually by 7:30 A.M., and tries to scout stocks           that have been neglected by other traders, building positions during the           day that range as high as $1 million -- "maybe for a minute," he said. 
            Even so, the last few months have been a puzzle to him and his           trading-room friends. 
            "We all feel it's going get tougher and tougher," said John, who began day           trading about three years ago, after trying unsuccessfully to get a job at a           big brokerage house. "I'm a pessimist. Over the past year, the           opportunities have been unbelievable. I'm not going to say it's never going           to happen, but I just don't think Yahoo is going to double or triple from           here." 
            He added, "We have been on a great bull run, but a bear market will           wipe out a lot of day traders." And, he acknowledged, "this isn't a           stepping stone to Goldman Sachs." 
            But, he said, day trading "grabs you" and "it's hard to get out, especially if           you're successful." 
            Though day trading has grown more challenging since the Internet stocks           peaked, few day traders have buckled down to doing the kind of           homework that more selective trading demands. 
            Mary Lanigan, who is 52 and trades with Momentum Securities in           Houston, avoids Internet stocks. Early last week, she was amused to find           that many of the young traders around her, who tend to focus solely on           the internal rhythms of the trading day, were mystified that Yahoo was           slumping despite apparently good earnings. 
            "I had seen the negative story in Barron's on Saturday, analyzing the           quality of those earnings," she said. "They hadn't." 
            She added, "Here, most young traders would rather go to Mexico for the           weekend than read up on stocks." 
            Kazazian, the 23-year-old Manhattan trader, was more optimistic than           many, saying recently that "mid-June looks like it might have been the           bottom." But he agreed that the days were gone when one could play any           Internet stock and make money. "I think the days ahead will separate the           blue chips from the junk," he said, laughing a bit at the notion of using           "blue chip" to describe anything as ephemeral as an Internet stock. 
            The people who make their living by catering to this new category of           self-employed traders have not been daunted by the recent Internet           roller-coaster. 
            Karen Schwenke, 38, a former corporate marketing executive -- "I was           once manager of jigsaw puzzles for Golden Books Entertainment," she           said -- entered the day-trading world about two years ago by helping to           set up La Salle Street Trading, an affiliate of Momentum in Milwaukee. 
            "I always wanted to own my own business, but I don't want to bake           bread or frame pictures -- I'm just not very good at that," Ms. Schwenke           said. 
            "This is a business I have really grown to love." 
            Initially, office start-up chores took up her time. But about six months           ago, she was finally able to begin day trading herself, using what she calls           a "pure scalping" style in which she holds stocks for less than a minute           before selling. "It's been a slow start," she said. "But I'm learning, and will           be ready when things pick up." 
            The recent downturn in Internet stocks "certainly changed some people's           perspective," Ms. Schwenke said. 
            "You didn't have that wind at your back, when the volume always           seemed to be there. That has made the market much tougher to trade." 
            Still, she said, she has gained some customers lately from among the           burgeoning population of active online traders who have left their home           computers in search of better technology and faster execution of their           trades. 
                ames H. Lee, the president of Momentum Securities in Houston and               of the Electronic Traders Association, pointed out that April was "an           absolutely extraordinary month" in trading volume and that May and June           might reflect a more normal pattern. 
            While Lee, speaking on behalf of the association, said he expected           trading volume from on-site day traders to grow, he acknowledged that           the overall number of people involved in day trading had not changed           much in recent months. 
            But that may merely reflect the arithmetic confronting firms that cater to           day traders, he said. 
            An online brokerage firm spends roughly $250 for each new customer,           Lee estimated. By contrast, he said, an on-site day-trading firm may           spend $30,000 on each new customer, counting the outlay on equipment,           office space and training. Since the firm charges a fee for each trade, it           may not begin to recoup that investment until the new customer has           become secure enough to trade actively. 
            The lack of growth Lee claims for the day-trading population hasn't           reduced the criticism from regulators. Early this month, Massachusetts           securities watchdogs sued the Landmark Securities Corporation in           Houston, accusing its Boston branch of signing up customers who should           not have been allowed to pursue the risky life of a day trader and then           extending credit to them on usurious terms. Pete Oppel, a spokesman for           Landmark, said the company "has been and will continue to discuss the           matters with Massachusetts authorities, but we are not willing to discuss           them in the media."The case was the sixth that Massachusetts regulators           have filed against day-trading firms. 
            Lee and others say that most of the evils attributed to day traders are           actually the work of at-home speculators who trade through online           brokers. And day traders themselves seem to dismiss the regulatory           cases as growing pains. "They can't turn back the clocks," said Chris, 27,           who trades at On-Line in Jersey City. "Day trading has already           established itself." 
            Indeed, many traders said they thought the post-April slump would help           their new community to mature -- to hone its skills and judgment. 
                 ut every upward leap in the Internet sector may well dislodge a                little bit of the caution that began to take root among day traders in           the post-April selloff. 
            People are more careful and selective now, said Brian, the wary young           trader in Jersey City, "but you only stay cautious until you start making           money." Then, he said, "once some more frenzy starts, people will go           back to the old style." 
            He added, with an irrepressible grin, "This has been a big reality check,           but people forget." |