Swing Trading

Swing Trading

Table of Contents Expand What Is Swing Trading? Understanding Swing Trading Pros and Cons Day Trading vs. Swing Trading Swing Trading Tactics Real-World Example Swing trading is a style of trading that attempts to capture short- to medium-term gains in a stock (or any financial instrument) over a period of a few days to several weeks. Swing trading is one of the most popular forms of active trading, where traders look for intermediate-term opportunities using various forms of technical analysis. Swing traders can take profits utilizing an established risk/reward ratio based on a stop loss and profit target, or they can take profits or losses based on a technical indicator or price action movements. 1:29 Swing trading exposes a trader to overnight and weekend risk, where the price could gap and open the following session at a substantially different price.

Swing trading involves taking trades that last a couple of days up to several months in order to profit from an anticipated price move.

What Is Swing Trading?

Swing trading is a style of trading that attempts to capture short- to medium-term gains in a stock (or any financial instrument) over a period of a few days to several weeks. Swing traders primarily use technical analysis to look for trading opportunities.

Swing traders may utilize fundamental analysis in addition to analyzing price trends and patterns.

Swing trading involves taking trades that last a couple of days up to several months in order to profit from an anticipated price move.
Swing trading exposes a trader to overnight and weekend risk, where the price could gap and open the following session at a substantially different price.
Swing traders can take profits utilizing an established risk/reward ratio based on a stop loss and profit target, or they can take profits or losses based on a technical indicator or price action movements.

Understanding Swing Trading

Typically, swing trading involves holding a position either long or short for more than one trading session, but usually not longer than several weeks or a couple of months. This is a general time frame, as some trades may last longer than a couple of months, yet the trader may still consider them swing trades. Swing trades can also occur during a trading session, though this is a rare outcome that is brought about by extremely volatile conditions.

The goal of swing trading is to capture a chunk of a potential price move. While some traders seek out volatile stocks with lots of movement, others may prefer more sedate stocks. In either case, swing trading is the process of identifying where an asset's price is likely to move next, entering a position, and then capturing a chunk of the profit if that move materializes.

Successful swing traders are only looking to capture a chunk of the expected price move, and then move on to the next opportunity.

Swing trading is one of the most popular forms of active trading, where traders look for intermediate-term opportunities using various forms of technical analysis.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Swing Trading

Many swing traders assess trades on a risk/reward basis. By analyzing the chart of an asset they determine where they will enter, where they will place a stop loss, and then anticipate where they can get out with a profit. If they are risking $1 per share on a setup that could reasonably produce a $3 gain, that is a favorable risk/reward ratio. On the other hand, risking $1 only to make $0.75 isn't quite as favorable.

Swing traders primarily use technical analysis, due to the short-term nature of the trades. That said, fundamental analysis can be used to enhance the analysis. For example, if a swing trader sees a bullish setup in a stock, they may want to verify that the fundamentals of the asset look favorable or are improving also.

Swing traders will often look for opportunities on the daily charts and may watch 1-hour or 15-minute charts to find a precise entry, stop loss, and take-profit levels.

Day Trading vs. Swing Trading

The distinction between swing trading and day trading is, usually, the holding time for positions. Swing trading, often, involves at least an overnight hold, whereas day traders close out positions before the market closes. To generalize, day trading positions are limited to a single day while swing trading involves holding for several days to weeks.

By holding overnight, the swing trader incurs the unpredictability of overnight risk such as gaps up or down against the position. By taking on the overnight risk, swing trades are usually done with a smaller position size compared to day trading (assuming the two traders have similarly sized accounts). Day traders typically utilize larger position sizes and may use a day trading margin of 25%.

Swing traders also have access to a margin or leverage of 50%. This means that if the trader is approved for margin trading, they only need to put up $25,000 in capital for a trade with a current value of $50,000, for example.

Swing Trading Tactics

A swing trader tends to look for multi-day chart patterns. Some of the more common patterns involve moving average crossovers, cup-and-handle patterns, head and shoulders patterns, flags, and triangles. Key reversal candlesticks may be used in addition to other indicators to devise a solid trading plan.

Ultimately, each swing trader devises a plan and strategy that gives them an edge over many trades. This involves looking for trade setups that tend to lead to predictable movements in the asset's price. This isn't easy, and no strategy or setup works every time. With a favorable risk/reward, winning every time isn't required. The more favorable the risk/reward of a trading strategy, the fewer times it needs to win in order to produce an overall profit over many trades.

Real-World Example of Swing Trade in Apple

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Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2020

The chart above shows a period where Apple (AAPL) had a strong price move higher. This was followed by a small cup and handle pattern which often signals a continuation of the price rise if the stock moves above the high of the handle.

In this case:

Aside from a risk/reward, the trader could also utilize other exit methods, such as waiting for the price to make a new low. With this method, an exit signal wasn't given until $216.46, when the price dropped below the prior pullback low. This method would have resulted in a profit of $23.76 per share. Thought of another way — a 12% profit in exchange for less than 3% risk. This swing trade took approximately two months.

Other exit methods could be when the price crosses below a moving average (not shown), or when an indicator such as the stochastic oscillator crosses its signal line.

What Are the "Swings" in Swing Trading?

Swing trading tried to identify entry and exit points into a security on the basis of its intra-week or intra-month oscillations, between cycles of optimism and pessimism.

How Does Swing Trading Differ From Day Trading?

Day trading, as the name suggests, involves making dozens of trades in a single day, based on technical analysis and sophisticated charting systems. Day trading seeks to scalp small profits multiple times a day, closing out positions overnight. Swing traders do not close their positions on a daily basis and instead may hold onto them for weeks or months, or even longer. Swing traders will also tend to incorporate both technical and fundamental analysis.

What Are Some Indicators or Tools Used by Swing Traders?

Swing traders will use tools like moving averages overlaid on daily or weekly candlestick charts, momentum indicators, price range tools, and measures of market sentiment. Swing traders are also on the lookout for technical patterns like the head-and-shoulders and cup-and-handle.

Which Types of Securities Are Best-Suited for Swing Trading?

While a swing trader can enjoy success in any number of securities, the best candidates tend to be large-cap stocks, which are among the most actively traded stocks on the major exchanges. In an active market, these stocks will often swing between broadly defined high and low points, and the swing trader will ride the wave in one direction for a couple of days or weeks and then switch to the opposite side of the trade when the stock reverses direction. Swing trades are also viable in actively-traded commodities and forex markets.

Related terms:

Active Trading

Active trading is the buying and selling of securities or other instruments with the intention of only holding the position for a short period of time. read more

Bull

A bull is an investor who invests in a security expecting the price will rise. Discover what bullish investors look for in stocks and other assets. read more

Candlestick

A candlestick is a type of price chart that displays the high, low, open, and closing prices of a security for a specific period and originated from Japan. read more

Exhausted Selling Model

The exhausted selling model is used to estimate when a period of declining prices for a security has ended and higher prices may be forthcoming. read more

Exit Point

An exit point is the price at which a trader closes their long or short position to realize a profit or loss. Exit points are typically based on strategies. read more

Forex Scalping

Forex scalping is a method of trading where the trader typically makes multiple trades each day, trying to profit off small price movements. read more

Fundamental Analysis

Fundamental analysis is a method of measuring a stock's intrinsic value. Analysts who follow this method seek out companies priced below their real worth. read more

Gap

A gap is an area on a technical chart where an asset's price jumps higher or lower from the previous day’s close. read more

Head and Shoulders Pattern

A head and shoulders pattern is a bearish indicator that appears on a chart as a set of three troughs and peaks, with the center peak a head above two shoulders. read more

Risk/Reward Ratio

The risk/reward ratio is used by many investors to compare the expected returns of an investment with the amount of risk undertaken to capture these returns. read more

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