Intraday trading is the practice of buying and selling financial instruments within the same day. The goal is to capture small price movements and close all positions before the market shuts, avoiding the risk of price swings that can happen overnight.
In the ongoing series exploring the diverse landscape of trading styles, we have already dissected the lightning-fast world of the scalper, the patient strategy of the swing trader, and the high-intensity environment of the day trader.
However, there exists a specific subset of market participants who occupy a unique "middle ground" within the single trading day. These are the intraday traders.
While many people use "day trading" and "intraday trading" terms interchangeably, seasoned professionals know that while all day traders are intraday traders, not all intraday traders follow the stereotypical "day trading" pattern of rapid-fire execution. Intraday trading is a broad discipline focused on capturing price movements that occur between the opening bell and the closing bell, ensuring no positions are held overnight.
Let’s take a deep dive into what it means to be an intraday trader, the strategies they employ, and how they navigate the unique risks of the 24-hour (or 8-hour) market cycle.
What is intraday trading?
At its core, intraday trading is the practice of buying and selling financial instruments, be it stocks, currencies, or commodities, within the same business day. The golden rule is: all positions must be closed before the market closes.
By exiting the market before the day ends, intraday traders eliminate "gap risk." This is the risk that news breaking overnight (like an unexpected earnings report, a geopolitical event, or a central bank announcement) will cause the price to "gap" significantly higher or lower when the market reopens, bypassing the trader’s stop-loss orders.
Intraday vs. day trading: A nuance in speed
While a "day trader" might move in and out of a dozen positions in a morning, an "intraday trader" might focus on just one or two significant "meat of the move" trends. They are less concerned with the "noise" of one-minute charts and more focused on the 15-minute, 30-minute, or 1-hour trends that develop over the course of a single session.
The intraday trader’s toolkit: Strategies for success
For the intraday trader, the "big picture" takes a backseat to the immediate reality of price action. While long-term investors may focus on a company’s balance sheet, day traders live and die by the sword of technical analysis and the shifting dynamics of supply and demand.
To navigate this, traders tend to lean on a core set of proven strategies to find their edge. Let us take a look at them.
1. Riding the wave: Momentum reading
Momentum trading is all about identifying a "runaway train" and hopping on for the ride. These traders tend to look for assets exhibiting strong directional conviction supported by significant volume.
The catalyst: Momentum is rarely random. It is often fueled by a fundamental spark, think surprise earnings beats or major geopolitical shifts.
The goal: Traders look to enter as the trend accelerates and exit at the first sign of exhaustion or a "stalling" in price action.
2. Fading the move: Mean reversion
This strategy rests on the "rubber band" theory: the idea that price can only stretch so far from its average before it snaps back. When an asset becomes excessively overextended, often signaled by "overbought" or "oversold" readings on oscillators — mean reversion traders will "fade" the move.
The target: Traders bet against the prevailing trend, expecting the price to return to its historical mean, usually represented by a specific Moving Average.
Take a look at the GBP/USD H1 chart below. Gold had been trading some way above the 100-day MA following a swift rally. Eventually, the price retreats and drops to trade back at the 100-day MA.
In the example below, we have the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and price action showing signs of divergence (GBP/USD makes higher highs after breaching 1.3584 while the RSI is making lower highs), which further hints at a potential bounce in the price of GBP/USD, adding another layer of confluence.
3. Capitalizing on the break: Breakout trading
Breakout traders focus on the "psychological ceilings and floors" of the market, known as resistance and support. When price consolidates within a range, energy builds up.
The execution: Once price decisively pierces a key level on high volume, it signals that one side of the market has won the tug-of-war. The trader enters the position expecting a continuation of that momentum.
One of the more popular forms of breakout trading is the opening range breakout strategy.
The Opening Range Breakout (ORB) strategy involves identifying an instrument's high and low prices within a set timeframe (typically the first 5, 15, or 30 minutes) after the market opens.
Traders enter a long position if the price breaks above the high or a short position if it drops below the low. It capitalizes on early-morning volatility and high trading volume to capture a trend established by initial institutional momentum.
The example below shows the Nasdaq 100 M1 chart where the first 15 minutes of the New York session have been marked off. The purple lines indicate the highs and lows of the opening 15 minutes.
When the candle breaks and closes to the upside, this presents a potential long opportunity. As you can see on the chart, after breaking higher there was a slight pullback before a rally of approximately 180 points to the upside materialized.
4. Navigating the day: Pivot point trading
Pivot points act as a primary roadmap for the session. Derived from the previous day’s high, low, and close, these levels are widely watched by the institutional "herd," making them key price points to pay attention to.
The insight: These levels provide objective areas where a trend might reverse or find temporary support, helping traders identify high-probability entry and exit zones before the opening bell even rings.
The daily routine of an intraday trader
In order to improve the probability of success in intraday trading it is of utmost importance that traders are well prepared before the market even opens. Unlike a scalper who reacts to a tape, an intraday trader follows a disciplined regimen:
Pre-market analysis (8:00 AM - 9:30 AM): Traders scan the global news, check the economic calendar (for events like CPI data or Fed meetings), and identify a "watchlist" of 3 to 5 instruments showing high volatility or volume in pre-market trading.
The opening range (9:30 AM - 10:30 AM): Many intraday traders wait for the "opening range" to be established. The first hour of trading is often the most volatile; traders look for the high and low of this period to set their boundaries for the day.
Mid-day management: This is when the intraday trader monitors their setups. If a trend develops, they may "scale into" a winning position.
The market close (3:30 PM - 4:00 PM): This is the "no-man's land" where discipline is tested. Even if a trade is slightly in the red, the intraday trader sticks to their rules and closes the position to avoid overnight risk.
Risk management: The intraday lifeblood
Because intraday traders use leverage to maximize their returns on small daily price fluctuations, risk management is not just a suggestion, but rather a survival requirement.
The 1% rule: Most professional intraday traders stick to the rule of never risking more than 1% of their total account capital on a single trade.
Strict stop-losses: A stop-loss is an automated order to close if the price hits a certain level. In the intraday world, these are usually non-negotiable.
Risk-to-reward ratio: A typical intraday trader looks for a ratio of at least 1:2. This means they are willing to lose $100 to make $200. This allows them to improve their probability even if they only win 40% of their trades.
Is intraday trading right for you?
Choosing this style requires an honest assessment of your personality and lifestyle.
The pros:
- No overnight risk: You sleep soundly knowing your capital isn't at the mercy of a midnight news cycle.
- Fast feedback: You know by the end of the day whether your strategy worked or not.
- Compound interest: Because capital is freed up every night, it can be reinvested the very next morning.
The cons:
- High pressure: Deciding where to exit a trade in seconds or minutes can be mentally exhausting.
- Transaction costs: Frequent trading means more commissions and spreads, which can eat into profits if not managed carefully.
- Time-intensive: Unlike swing trading, you cannot "set it and forget it." You must be at your screen during market hours.
Intraday trading is a demanding discipline that bridges the gap between the frantic pace of scalping and the slow burn of swing trading. It requires a unique blend of technical skill, emotional control, and a deep respect for the clock.
Whether you are looking to catch the morning breakout or fade the afternoon exhaustion, the intraday market offers a fresh canvas every single morning. The question is: are you ready to paint?
The best way to find out is to practice in a risk-free environment.
Open a free OANDA Demo Account today to test your ability and intraday strategy.
This article and its contents are intended for educational purposes only and should not be considered trading advice. Forex trading is high risk. Losses may exceed deposits.