Swing Trading Guide: Strategies for 1-14 Day Trades
Complete swing trading methodology for capturing multi-day price moves using technical analysis, signals, and disciplined position management.
What Is Swing Trading?
Swing trading captures price "swings" over 1-14 days, sitting between day trading (hours) and position trading (weeks/months). It's ideal for traders with full-time jobs who can dedicate 30-60 minutes daily to chart analysis.
Why Swing Trading Works
- Captures bigger moves: 3-15% per trade (vs. 0.5-2% for day trades)
- Lower time commitment: Check charts morning and evening, not all day
- No PDT rule concerns: Fewer than 4 trades per week typically
- Better risk-reward: Wider targets allow for better R:R ratios
- Works in all markets: Stocks, crypto, forex, commodities
Swing Trading Requirements
- Capital: $2,000+ (no PDT rule constraints for swing trades held overnight)
- Time: 30-60 minutes per day (pre-market and post-market review)
- Patience: Holding through pullbacks within the larger move
- Discipline: Exiting at stops and targets, not holding "just one more day"
Best Swing Trading Setups
Setup 1: Pullback to Moving Average in Uptrend
- Context: Stock/asset in clear uptrend (above 50 and 200 EMA)
- Entry trigger: Price pulls back to 20 or 50 EMA → bullish candle (hammer, engulfing)
- Stop-loss: Below the EMA or below the pullback low
- Target: Previous swing high or 2-3x risk
- Success rate: 60-65% in trending markets
Setup 2: Breakout with Volume Confirmation
- Context: Price consolidating at resistance for 3+ days
- Entry trigger: Daily close above resistance on 2x average volume
- Stop-loss: Below breakout level (middle of consolidation)
- Target: Measured move (height of consolidation projected upward)
- Key: Volume must confirm — breakouts on low volume often fail
Setup 3: Double Bottom / Failed Breakdown
- Context: Price tests support twice, second test holds on lower volume
- Entry trigger: Break above the middle peak (neckline)
- Stop-loss: Below the double bottom low
- Target: Height of pattern projected from neckline
- Bonus: RSI divergence on second test adds confidence
Setup 4: Earnings Gap + Base (Post-Earnings Drift)
- Context: Stock gaps up on earnings, then builds a tight base for 3-5 days
- Entry trigger: Break above the post-earnings base on volume
- Stop-loss: Below the base low (or gap fill level)
- Target: 1.5-2x the base width projected upward
- Edge: Post-earnings drift is a well-documented market anomaly
Setup 5: Sector Rotation Entry
- Context: Sector ETF breaks out relative to S&P 500
- Entry trigger: Buy leading stocks within the rotating sector
- Stop-loss: Below sector ETF breakout level
- Target: Hold until sector shows relative weakness
- How SignalWhisper helps: Our sector rotation signals flag these moves early
Entry and Exit Rules
Entry Checklist (ALL must be true)
- âś… Higher timeframe trend supports direction (weekly/daily)
- âś… Setup pattern is complete and confirmed
- âś… Volume confirms the move
- âś… Risk-reward is 1:2 minimum
- âś… No conflicting positions (correlation check)
- âś… No high-impact economic events in next 24 hours
- âś… Position size calculated (1-2% account risk)
Exit Rules
Exit at target (scale out approach):- Close 1/3 at Target 1 (1.5x risk)
- Move stop to breakeven
- Close 1/3 at Target 2 (2.5x risk)
- Trail remaining 1/3 with moving average or ATR
- Non-negotiable. Exit immediately.
- No averaging down on swing trades
- If position hasn't moved in 5 trading days → review and likely close
- Capital sitting idle = opportunity cost
Position Management
Scaling In
- Enter 50% at initial signal, add 50% on confirmation (pullback hold, volume surge)
- Never average down into losing positions
- Add only when existing position is profitable
Trailing Stops for Swing Trades
- Method 1: Trail below each day's low (aggressive)
- Method 2: Trail below 10 EMA (moderate)
- Method 3: Trail 1.5 ATR below closing price (volatility-adjusted)
- Method 4: Trail below each higher swing low (structural)
Managing Multiple Positions
- Maximum 5 swing positions open simultaneously
- Check correlation: Don't hold 3 tech longs (that's one big tech bet)
- Total portfolio risk: All positions combined should risk <6% of account
- Stagger entries: Don't enter all positions on the same day
Integrating Signals into Swing Trading
How SignalWhisper Signals Fit Swing Trading
Our AI signals are particularly suited for swing trading because:- Signal timeframes match swing holds (1-7 day expectations)
- Entry, stop, and multiple targets are provided
- Political and macro analysis adds context most technical traders miss
- Confidence scoring helps you filter which signals to take
Signal Filter for Swing Traders
Only take signals that:- Align with higher timeframe trend (weekly)
- Have HIGH confidence (70%+)
- Offer 1:2+ risk-reward
- Aren't in assets you're already exposed to
- Aren't within 24 hours of a major economic event
Signal Execution Workflow
- Receive signal notification
- Verify setup on your own charts (15 seconds)
- Calculate position size based on stop distance
- Set limit order at signal entry (don't chase if already moved)
- Immediately set stop-loss and first target orders
- Log in journal: entry, plan, reasoning
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
How is swing trading different from day trading?
Swing trades are held overnight for 1-14 days, targeting larger 3-15% moves. Day trades close before market close. Swing trading requires less screen time (30-60 min/day) and no $25K PDT requirement, making it accessible to part-time traders.
What is the best timeframe for swing trading?
Use daily charts for setup identification and entry triggers. Weekly charts confirm the larger trend. 4-hour charts can fine-tune entries. Avoid 5-minute charts for swing trading — the noise will shake you out of good positions prematurely.
How many trades should a swing trader take per week?
1-3 new positions per week is optimal. Quality over quantity. Having 3-5 positions open at once is typical. Taking 10+ swing trades simultaneously makes portfolio management difficult and increases correlation risk.
Can I swing trade with $1,000?
Yes, especially in crypto and forex. For stocks, $2,000-5,000 is better for proper position sizing. With $1,000 and 1% risk per trade, your risk is only $10 — which limits what you can trade. Focus on building skills with this size before scaling up.
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