Objective research and reviews to aid investing decisions
Anyone attempting or contemplating day-trading should take a look at "Information-based Trading, Price Impact of Trades, and Trade Autocorrelation" of May 2004 by Kee Chung, Mingsheng Li and Thomas McInish. The authors examine how the price impact of trades and the persistence of trading direction relate to the probability of information-based trading, as opposed to liquidity trading (for example, by market makers) or noise trading (by the uninformed). Here’s what they find:
For background on measuring the probability that trading is information based, see "One Day in the Life of a Very Common Stock" by David Easley, Nicholas Kiefer and Maureen O’Hara from the Fall 1997 edition of The Review of Financial Studies.
In summary, the higher the probability that trading in a stock is informed, the greater the size and persistence of stock price movement.
See Blog Synthesis: Some Trading Indicators for analyses of the usefulness of other technical indicators. See also our blog entry of 10/22/04 for research on whether day traders make money.