- Startseite /
- Blog /
- Day Trading Deep Dive: Complete Guide
Day Trading Deep Dive: Complete Guide
Day trading opens and closes positions within a single session, and this complete guide covers the setups, timeframes, risk, psychology, and realistic economics of the style.
Interaktive Tools funktionieren in der übersetzten Ansicht möglicherweise nicht.
Day Trading Deep Dive: Complete Guide
Day trading is the most romanticized trading style and the most misunderstood. It means opening and closing positions within a single trading session, with no overnight exposure. Done well, it's a craft that compounds skill daily. Done badly, it's a fast way to lose money.
What day trading actually is
A day trader opens and closes all positions before the session ends, carries zero overnight risk, trades frequently (typically 2-10 trades per day), decides on a lower timeframe (1m, 5m, 15m), and reads context on a higher timeframe (1H, 4H, daily). The defining feature is the time stop: by end of day, you're flat. This eliminates overnight gap risk but forces you to find moves within the session.
The timeframes
Most day traders use a multi-timeframe stack: higher timeframe (1H or 4H) for trend direction and key levels; decision timeframe (15m) for structure and setup identification; execution timeframe (5m or 1m) for entry trigger and stop placement. The 5-minute chart is the workhorse for most day traders. The 1-minute is for scalpers — noisy and punishing.
Common setups
- Opening range breakout: the first 30-60 minutes define a range; a break with volume triggers an entry
- Pullback to moving average: in a trending session, fade the first pullback to the 20 or 50 EMA
- VWAP reversion: in equities, mean-reversion off the volume-weighted average price
- Range rotation: in a ranging session, fade the extremes
- News spike fade or follow-through: trade the post-news reaction after the spike settles
The best day traders specialize in 1-2 setups, not trade all five.
Risk management
Day trading's frequency makes risk management critical: risk per trade 0.5% to 1% (high frequency means losses stack fast), daily loss limit 2-3% then stop for the day, max trades per day capped at 5-8 to prevent overtrading, and no revenge trading (the most common day-trading killer). The daily loss limit is non-negotiable — a bad morning can spiral into a blown week without it.
The bottom line
Day trading is a high-intensity, high-frequency style with no overnight risk and a steep learning curve. Use a multi-timeframe stack, specialize in 1-2 setups, cap your daily loss at 2-3%, and treat the first two years as apprenticeship. It suits traders with time, emotional control, and patience — and it bleeds those who chase it for quick money.
Live Chart
Open full chart →Related market data, powered by TradingView.