Day traders stare at screens until their eyes burn. Scalpers act like human caffeine molecules, vibrating with every tick. Position traders look at the market once a day, maybe once a week, and then go do something else with their lives.
Position trading often viewed as the adult in the room. It is trading for people who have jobs, families, and no desire to fight an algorithm for three cents. It operates on the weekly and monthly time-frames. The goal is not to catch a “move.” The goal is to catch a “trend”: a fundamental shift in price may last for months or years.
This is the closest trading gets to investing, but with a crucial difference. An investor buys and holds forever (or until retirement). A position trader buys and holds as long as the prevailing trend remains intact. They are not married to the asset. They are dating it, exclusively and seriously, but they are willing to break up if the relationship turns toxic.
The Logic: Why Zoom Out?
The core philosophy of position trading is that “noise” tends to diminishover time. On a 5-minute chart, a random news headline can cause a massive, scary spike. On a monthly chart, that same spike may appear far less significant. . By operating on higher timeframes, the position trader seeks to reduce exposure to short-term, erratic price movements that can challenge active, short-term strategies.
They focus on the “primary trend.” Dow Theory, the grandfather of technical analysis, distinguishes between ripples (daily fluctuations), waves (secondary corrections), and tides (primary trends). Position traders surf the tides.
This approach offers notable lifestyle benefits. You don’t need expensive data feeds. You don’t need to wake up at 4 a.m. for the London open. You don’t need four monitors. But it requires a different kind of discipline: the patience to remain inactive for extended periods, and the emotional resilience to tolerate meaningful drawdowns without reacting impulsively.
Strategy 1: The Fundamental Catalyst
While technical matter, position trades are often influenced by fundamentals. A trend that lasts for an extended period typically has an underlying driver. It needs a story.
The position trader looks for a “macro shift.”
- Central Bank Policy: If the Fed starts cutting rates, bonds and growth stocks have historically tended to trend up for months.
- Supply Shocks: A multi-year shortage in copper due to electric vehicle demand.
- Technological Paradigms: The rise of AI contributing to multi-year strength in semiconductor stocks.
The strategy is to identify the catalyst first, then use the chart for entry. You are not guessing the bottom. You wait for the fundamentals to turn, then you buy the first pullback in the new reality.
Strategy 2: The 200-Day Moving Average Filter
Simple is often better. For position traders, the 200-day Moving Average (MA) is commonly used as the ultimate filter.
- If the price is above the 200-day MA, traders may choose to focus on long setups.
- If the price is below the 200-day MA, traders may choose to focus on short setups or remain in cash.
This framework helps traders stay aligned with the prevailing longer-term trend. A widely referenced position trading approach is the “Golden Cross,” where a buy signal is typically identified when the 50-day MA crosses above the 200-day MA, and an exit is often considered when it crosses back below.
This type of system can under perform in choppy or sideways markets, resulting in multiple false signals. However, during sustained trending environments, such as major market declines or recoveries observed in past cycles, it has historically aimed to capture a significant portion of the broader move while requiring relatively limited discretionary decision-making.
Strategy 3: Breakouts on Weekly Charts
Position traders love “bases.” A base is a long period of time, months or years, where a stock goes nowhere. It grinds sideways, boring for everyone. The sellers are exhausted, the buyers are accumulating.
The position trader sets an alert for a breakout above the top of this base on a weekly chart. When the price finally wakes up and punches through resistance on elevated y volume, it can signal a new era. This is often how multi-year “baggers” start.
The stop-loss is typically placed below the breakout level. If the breakout is sustained, the price should not look back. If it falls back into the base, the trade may no longer be valid. This is the classic “Stan Weinstein” stage analysis approach.
The Psychological Cost: The Drawdown
The hardest part of position trading is not the entry. It is the holding.
To catch a large move, you have to be willing to sit through a lower correction. You have to watch thousands of dollars of open profit evaporate during a bad week, and not touch the sell button because the primary trend is still intact.
This can be psychologically demanding. The desire to “lock in profits” can be strong. But the moment you sell to lock in a small gain, you become a swing trader. You have abandoned the philosophy. Position trading requires acceptance of short-term variance and a willingness to remain aligned with the broader trend, even when short-term price action becomes uncomfortable.
Final Reminder: Risk Never Sleeps
Heads up: Trading is risky. This is only educational information, not an investment advice.