What is Trading?
Trading is the act of buying and selling financial instruments (stocks, bonds, currencies, etc.) with the goal of making a profit. Unlike investing, which typically involves holding assets for years, trading often involves shorter time horizons — from seconds to months.
The Two Sides of Every Trade
Every trade has two participants:
- Buyer (Long) — Believes the price will go UP. Profits when price rises.
- Seller (Short) — Believes the price will go DOWN. Profits when price falls.
Long: You buy Apple stock at $150, hoping it rises to $180. If it does, you sell and pocket $30/share profit.
Short: You borrow and sell Apple stock at $150, hoping it drops to $120. If it does, you buy it back, return the shares, and pocket $30/share profit.
Why Prices Move
Prices move based on supply and demand, which are influenced by:
- Fundamentals — Company earnings, economic data, interest rates
- Sentiment — News, social media, fear and greed
- Technicals — Chart patterns, support/resistance levels
- Flow — Large institutional orders, algorithmic trading
The platform aggregates all four price drivers: fundamentals via Finnhub, sentiment via Reddit/Twitter/news, technicals via 40+ pattern detectors, and flow via VPIN/whale detection. See /derivatives for the Human vs. Automation score that separates retail sentiment from bot activity.