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Day
Trading Ads: Cutting Through the "Bull"
No risk! Guaranteed profits! Financial freedom!
I'm sure you've seen these kinds of claims!
Advertisements
for some day
trading
systems or
advisory
services
make
investing
look like a
virtual
bonanza
where
everyone's a
winner.
But if one
thing's
certain
about
stocks,
commodity
futures,
options and
similar
investments,
it's that
they're
uncertain.
Any company
that
guarantees
huge
earnings is
feeding you
a load of
"bull."
Day traders
spend their
time at
computer
screens,
quickly
buying and
selling
investments
within a
single day -
sometimes
within just
a few hours
or minutes -
and reacting
to continual
market
swings. They
trade in the
hope that
their
investments
will soar in
value in the
short time
they hold
them, and
net them
quick
profits.
Often they
use
computerized
systems or
advisory
services
that claim
to be able
to predict
the markets.
No doubt
about it,
this is a
risky
business.
Despite the
picture of
investing
success
painted by
some day
trading
companies'
ads, far
more day
traders lose
money than
make it.
Some traders
lose big,
forfeiting
their
student loan
money,
second
mortgages or
retirement
funds. In
addition,
people who
trade on
margin or
sell short
risk losing
much more
than their
investment.
Every time
investors
make a
trade, they
pay a
commission.
That's true
whether they
buy or sell
and whether
they make
money or
lose their
shirt.
Read Between
the Lines
Learning the
language of
day trading
can help you
separate
fact from
fantasy when
reading an
ad or
listening to
a
commercial.
If
the ad
promises...
"The
potential to
make a six
or seven
figure
annual
income from
trading is
at the ends
of your
fingertips."
Remember
that...
It's
dangerous to
fall for
extravagant
profit
claims. Many
are based on
hypothetical
performance,
meaning that
no trades
were ever
really made.
And it's far
from certain
that a bona
fide trader
will be able
to place the
same trades
as the
hypothetical
trader.
Actual
results may
not match
the
hypothetical
performance
- and even
trading
advisors
with a long
track record
of success
can lose a
fortune
suddenly.
If
the ad
promises...
"The
absolute
best trading
system with
a
profit-to-loss
ratio of
12-to-1 and
an average
return
better than
18 percent
per
trade..."
Remember
that...
Even if the
system
really has
had such
successes,
past
performance
is no
guarantee of
future
results and
nobody - not
even
financial
experts -
can
guarantee
what the
market is
going to do
from day to
day or even
minute to
minute. No
matter how
strong the
market may
seem and how
solid a
particular
company may
appear,
prices can
skyrocket or
plummet
faster than
you can say
"Wall
Street."
If
the ad
promises...
"Our
software
signals
precisely
when to buy
and when to
sell a
particular
security,
allowing you
the
opportunity
to make
money
regardless
of the
market going
up or
down..."
Remember
that...
As
tempting as
it might be
to leave
your
investment
decisions in
the hands of
a software
program, the
ultimate
responsibility
for
protecting
your
investment
belongs to
you. No
matter how
sophisticated
a system for
evaluating
investments
might sound,
there's no
way to
guarantee
the future
performance
of
investments.
If there
were, you
can be sure
that the
software
developers
would be
making their
money using
their
programs
themselves,
not
promoting it
to others!
If
the ad
promises...
"Our
recommendations
returned an
average
annual
return of
250 percent.
If you can
just follow
our
recommendations,
you will
make money."
Remember
that...
There's no
fail-safe
way to
invest
without any
risk.
High-yield
investments
tend to
involve high
risk. Be
particularly
suspicious
of sales
pitches that
play down
risk or
portray
written risk
disclosures
as routine
formalities.
Believe the
risk
disclosures
that say you
could lose
your whole
investment.
Jumping on a
"hot"
investment
tip is a
good way to
get
"burned."
If
the ad
promises...
"Timothy
Smith, who
used our
system wrote
to us, '...
at night I
work with
your trading
system for a
few hours
and am
averaging
more than
$500 a
day.'"
Remember
that...
Everyone
loves a good
testimonial,
but it's
smart to be
wary of
them. The
story may or
may not be
true. And
it's highly
unlikely
that the
testimonial
reflects the
actual
experiences
of other
people using
the system
or advisory
service - or
the result
you're
hoping for.
Invest
Carefully
Whether or
not you're a
day trader,
your best
protection
as an
investor is
to know what
you're
buying, what
the ground
rules are
when you buy
and sell,
and what
level of
risk you're
assuming.
If you
decide to do
business
with a
company
offering day
trading
systems or
advisory
services,
it's
important to
check it out
before
putting your
money on the
line.
-
If the
trading
system
involves
stocks,
call
your
state
securities
regulator
to find
out
whether
the
company
has ever
been
disciplined
or has
complaints
against
it. Look
in the
government
section
of your
phone
book or
visit
the
North
American
Securities
Administrators
Association's
website
at
www.nasaa.org.
You also
can get
a firm's
disciplinary
history
by
calling
the
National
Association
of
Securities
Dealers-Regulation
Public
Disclosure
Program
at
1-800-289-9999
or by
visiting
its
website
at
www.nasdr.com/2000.htm.
-
If the
trading
system
involves
commodity
futures
or
options,
call the
National
Futures
Association
toll-free
at
1-800-621-3570
or
1-800-676-4NFA
(4632).
In addition:
-
Look
carefully
at the
basis
for any
claims
the
company
makes.
-
Talk to
other
traders
who have
used the
company.
-
Check
out the
company
with the
Better
Business
Bureau
and the
local
consumer
protection
agency.
To File a
Complaint
To file a
complaint
regarding a
commodity
futures or
options
investment,
contact the
Commodity
Futures
Trading
Commission
at (866)
366-2382,
complete an
online
complaint
form at
www.cftc.gov,
or write:
Commodity
Futures
Trading
Commission,
Division of
Enforcement,
Three
Lafayette
Centre, 1155
21st Street,
NW,
Washington,
DC 20581.
To file a
complaint
regarding a
stock
investment,
contact the
Securities
and Exchange
Commission
by phone at
(202)
942-7040;
online at
www.sec.gov/invkhome.htm;
or by
writing:
Securities
and Exchange
Commission,
Office of
Investor
Education,
450 5th
Street NW,
Washington,
DC
20549-0213.
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Topics covered in this article include; stock
trading, day trading, buying stocks, stock options, stock market,
investing
stock
trading, day trading, buying stocks, stock options, stock market,
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