Online Stock Day Trading Tip
ONLINE STOCK DAY TRADING TIP: THE 3:52 PLAY - CAPPING OFF THE DAY WITH A FINE
CIGAR
THIS IS WHERE THE OTHER GUY STARTS TO PANIC
The 3:52 play is a setup I discovered while working in an online stock day
trading room observing over 100 other online stock day traders going through
their daily gyrations with the online stock day trading market. It is commonly
known amongst traders that the 3:30 p.m. Eastern time zone is a key reversal
point in the online stock day trading markets. What was fascinating is that I
would watch this room full of online stock day trading stare at the bounce (or
sell off) that would start at 3:30, and then they would wait, wait, and wait
some more. They would wait for confirmation on the online stock day trading,
wait for an indicator-based buy or sell signal, wait for their mother to call
and tell them it was ok, or whatever. The point is they would wait to jump in on
the online stock day trading move. Finally, they would succumb to the pressure
to get in, and jump in on the move just as it was running out of steam. I would
spend the rest of the session watching in fascination as they pointed, gyrated
and yelled at their computer screens as the online stock day trading markets
drifted against them. Often times they would wait until the last possible minute
to get out of their online stock day trading S&P futures trades, which is
4:15 p.m. Eastern. They would wait in the hopes that the markets would come back
to them, and they spent this brief session praying that their online stock day
trading position would work out. Sometimes it did, but often times it did not
because there were too many of them trapped and hoping for the same online stock
day trading move. As the online stock day trading markets neared the 4:15 p.m.
time frame, they had no choice. They could not wait any longer and they were
forced to close out their online stock day trading positions. Like rats on a
sinking ship, these online stock day traders would all head for the exits at
once. If they were long, they would all be selling at once. If they were short,
they would all be buying at once.
The interesting part of this online stock day trading is that the liquidity
dries up after 4:00 p.m. Eastern. With the decreased liquidity that occurs from
4:00 p.m. -- 4:15 p.m., these groups of online stock day traders can easily
cause exaggerated movements in the markets in the final minutes before the
closing bell. This causes the online stock day trading markets to move hard
against them. I watched them do this day after day, assuming that one day they
would catch on. They never did, and after a while I would just sit there and do
the opposite of what they were doing, and while they were crying I was cashing
in. This same setup continues to work today and it is something I do nearly
every trading day. Like a Single Malt Scotch after a Filet Mignon, it's a great
way to cap off a trading session.
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