DAWG and I make the Wall Street Journal . . . . .6311
Want to Make a Killing? Day Trading Isn't the Way
By JASON ANDERS THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION
Lamar Cook was tired of watching everyone else make money.
As a regular participant on Silicon Investor, an online stock discussion Web site, he had read countless success stories about day trading -- a trading style that involves rapidly jumping in and out of stocks, sometimes dozens of times a day.
So one day last October, Mr. Cook, home sick from his construction job in Gadsden, Ala., decided he could wait no longer. Using his online trading account with Waterhouse Securities, he spent the day buying and selling two stocks several times for a profit of $800. "I thought it was the easiest thing in the world," he says. "Until the next time I did it."
Just two days later, Mr. Cook again stayed home from work and day traded -- and lost a staggering $9,000. In a panic to recover some of his money, he tried to buy another stock for a quick flip, and lost another $2,000. "My wife and I lost two years of our savings," he said. "It was horrifying."
Raising Eyebrows
The growing popularity of day trading has drawn scrutiny from securities regulators, who fear investors are getting in over their heads. On Wednesday, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Arthur Levitt said he is alarmed by the increasing popularity of day trading, and warned investors that rapid-fire online buying and selling can be dangerous.
Massachusetts has cracked down on alleged misrepresentations and other abuses by firms that offer office space and computer equipment to individual investors for day trading. "Our primary concern is novice investors getting involved with day trading," says Matthew Nestor, chief of enforcement of that state's securities regulations. "We want to make sure that the risks that are involved in day trading are disclosed. Unfortunately, people think that day trading is easy, and anybody can do it."
Still, new Web sites offering hot day-trading tips pop up all the time, and online message boards buzz with stories about the fast money to be made in day trading. A new board on Silicon Investor (www.techstocks.com) called "Are you considering quitting your dayjob to daytrade?" has drawn hundreds of posts in the last two weeks.
And business is booming for firms that teach people how to day trade. Trader's Edge, in New York, says there is a two-month waiting list for its day-trading seminar, which costs $1,495 for a weeklong course.
"We've gotten a lot of calls from people saying they've decided to day trade full time," says John Markese, president of the American Association of Individual Investors. "They have $50,000 and they want to work it up to a million by the end of the year."
Mr. Markese says such callers always ask him about what sort of computer equipment and software will be necessary, but he says they never ask about the risks involved. "To them, it looks like easy money," he says.
But it's anything but easy, says Tim Stefanich, a well-known participant on Silicon Investor and a full-time day trader. "These people don't understand the risks," says Mr. Stefanich, who trades from his Los Angeles home. "The hype of the Internet stocks is bringing people in. These people are gambling, they're not investing and they're not day trading."
Mr. Stefanich says he frequently receives electronic-mail messages from message-board participants looking to get started in day trading. He says that most investors he talks with don't understand that day traders often have to risk large sums of money to eke out a profit. They buy and sell large blocks of shares to take advantage of a price move that can be as little as a few cents a share. And day trading is expensive in other ways, too: Mr. Stefanich uses thousands of dollars in computer equipment and subscribes to a real-time trading system that allows him to execute most of his trades in just two seconds.
He says many of the claims he sees on message boards about big profits in day trading are overblown, and says the notion that anyone would quit a good job to day trade is "completely insane."
"I do this full time, and I think I have as much experience as anybody. And I still have days when I lose a lot of money," he says.
Sticking With It
But even some investors who understand the risks of day trading say they're drawn in. Tara Rill took a leave of absence from her job as a sixth-grade English teacher in order to day trade and, although she hasn't made a profit, says it doesn't look like she'll be going back.
Ms. Rill says she first noticed discussions about day trading on message boards about two years ago. After five years as a teacher in Gainesville, Fla., she was looking for a career change, so she started reading up on day trading. Last summer, she decided to take the plunge, and after a $1,200 day-trading course she went on leave from her job.
Ms. Rill was attracted to day trading's fast pace, but says so far the going has been slow. She is aiming for at least one trade a day, though there have been some days when she hasn't traded at all. And day trading hasn't been profitable for her; she estimates she has about as much money now as she started with.
"You have to go about this in a very serious way. It's not like you're taking a vacation to gamble in Las Vegas," she says. "I thought long and hard about it because I knew I wouldn't make any money for a year at least."
As for Mr. Cook, the investor who lost his savings, he says he still wants to start trading again as soon as possible. He says he's done with day trading, but says he still plans on quitting his job to invest in the stock market full time. "I figure I can let it beat me, or make me better," he says. "I'm going to go for it." |