Trading Styles
Explore different trading approaches — from day trading and scalping to swing trading, position trading, and contrarian strategies.
Overview
Every trader needs a style that matches their personality, risk tolerance, available time, and capital. Trading styles range from ultra-short-term day trading and scalping to multi-week swing trading and long-term position trading. Understanding the strengths, weaknesses, and requirements of each approach helps you build a sustainable trading practice aligned with your lifestyle and goals.
Topics Covered
Day Trading Fundamentals
Day trading involves opening and closing all positions within a single trading session, seeking to profit from intraday price movements. Day traders rely on short-term technical setups, level-to-level trading, and disciplined risk management to capture multiple small gains throughout the day. This style demands intense focus, fast execution, and strict rules to avoid carrying overnight risk.
Swing Trading
Swing trading captures price movements that unfold over several days to several weeks by riding the natural 'swings' between support and resistance levels. Swing traders combine technical analysis with patience, entering on pullbacks within a trend or at reversal points and holding until the next significant swing target is reached. This style balances active trading with the flexibility of not needing to monitor screens all day.
Position Trading
Position trading is a long-term approach where traders hold positions for weeks, months, or even longer to capture major trend moves. Position traders combine higher-timeframe technical analysis with fundamental and macroeconomic factors, entering on significant support levels or trend confirmations and riding trends until the macro thesis changes. This style requires patience and conviction in the face of short-term volatility.
Breakout Trading
Breakout trading involves entering a position when price moves decisively beyond a defined level of support, resistance, or consolidation. The strategy capitalises on the increased momentum and volatility that typically follow the breach of a significant level. The key challenge is distinguishing genuine breakouts from false ones, which requires volume confirmation, context analysis, and disciplined stop placement.
Pullback & Retracement Trading
Pullback trading is a trend-following strategy that involves waiting for price to temporarily retrace against the prevailing trend before entering in the trend direction. Rather than chasing breakouts, pullback traders buy the dip in uptrends or sell the rally in downtrends, achieving better entry prices and tighter stop levels. This approach combines patience with trend-following discipline.
Range Trading
Range trading exploits markets that are moving sideways between clearly defined support and resistance levels. Traders buy near support and sell near resistance, capitalising on the predictable oscillation. This style thrives in non-trending conditions where many trend-following strategies struggle, making it a valuable complement to a trader's toolkit.
Mean Reversion
Mean reversion trading is based on the principle that prices tend to return to a statistical average over time. When price deviates significantly from its mean (typically represented by a moving average or VWAP), mean reversion traders take positions expecting a snapback toward that average. This approach systematically exploits overextended moves and excesses in market sentiment.
Contrarian Trading
Contrarian trading involves taking positions against the prevailing market consensus, buying when fear is extreme and selling when euphoria peaks. This approach exploits the tendency for crowd sentiment to reach unsustainable extremes at market turning points. Contrarian traders use sentiment indicators, positioning data, and extreme technical readings to identify moments when the market is likely to reverse.