Scalping vs Swing Trading

In the financial markets, many participate, some as investors, some as traders. Investing, over years or even decades, is carried out with a long-term view in mind. Trading, meanwhile, moves on a daily basis to pocket profits.

The time span during which a trader holds a stock is a common technique for separating one type of trader from another, a variation that may vary from a few seconds to months or even years.

Day trading, swing trading, scalping, and position trading are among the most common trading strategies. It’s important for long-term success to choose a style that fits your own trading temperament. The distinctions between a scalping strategy and a swing trading strategy are laid out in this article.

A quick snapshot of the key differences between the two trading types is given in the table below.

Scalp Trading Swing Trading
Holding Period A few seconds to minutes, never overnight A few days to weeks, even months at times; most commonly held for few days
Number of Trades Can be hundreds during a day A few
Chart Tick chart or 1-5 minute charts Daily or weekly charts
Trader Traits Vigilance, impatience work well here Greater patience and precision required to understand trends
Decision-Making Time Rapid Fluid
Strategy Extreme Moderate
Stress Level High Moderate
Profit Target Small, multiple Few but large
Tracking Constant monitoring throughout the trading session Reasonable monitoring; requires up-to-date info on news and corporate events
Suitability Not for novice traders Suitable for all, from beginners to moderate and advanced players

 

Every type of trading comes with its own risk and reward package. There is no single ‘perfect strategy’ to suit all traders, making it best to select a trading strategy based on your abilities, temperament, the amount of time you can spend, the size of your account, trading experience, and tolerance for personal risk.

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