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Stock-market trading

What is stock-market trading and how do you start? A full guide: how the exchange works, order types, risk management and free analysis tools. Educational only.

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Disclosure, not advice

The strategies, scores and signals here are produced by an algorithmic system and based on technical data only. They are not investment advice or a substitute for professional advice, we are not investment advisors. Trading involves risk, and every decision and action is solely the user's responsibility.

Stock-market trading

Stock-market trading is buying and selling securities — stocks, ETFs and more — to take part in companies' growth and manage capital over time. This guide explains how the market works, the trading styles, and how to make data-driven decisions.

What the market is and how it works

The market is where shares of public companies trade. Buying a share buys partial ownership, and its price is set continuously by supply and demand.

Market health is tracked via indices: the S&P 500 and Nasdaq in the US, TA-35 in Israel. Understand the overall regime before focusing on a single stock.

How to start — step by step

1. Open a regulated brokerage account and fund what you can afford. 2. Pick and analyze a security — trend, fundamentals and technical signals. 3. Choose an order type: market or limit. 4. Predefine your exit in profit and in loss. 5. Track, journal and learn from every trade.

Risk management — the real differentiator

The most important rule: never risk more than 1–2% of your portfolio on a single trade. Set a stop-loss before entry, diversify, and avoid leverage you don't understand. Capital preservation beats a single big win.

How i-trade supports the decision

Instead of guessing, i-trade weights dozens of technical indicators, fundamentals, analyst consensus and institutional holdings into one clear signal per stock. This is data analysis only — not advice; the decision is always yours.

Frequently asked questions

How much do I need to start?

You can start small; what matters is starting with money you can afford to risk and learning risk management — ideally on a demo account first.

Stock vs ETF?

A stock is one company; an ETF holds a basket (e.g. the whole S&P 500), so it's more diversified and less volatile than a single stock.

Does i-trade give buy/sell recommendations?

No. i-trade provides objective technical analysis and data weighting for research only. Nothing here is investment advice; every decision is your own responsibility.

Want to apply this to a real stock? Get a weighted indicator signal for any ticker — for research.

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