what are some good places to learn short term speculation?
i wanna learn to read the charts, crunch the numbers, and figure out where the market is going, and why.
Every market is different, and bitcoin is really an oddball that doesn't seem to follow any traditional trading patterns.
What does matter is the information (and disinformation) available. And with this bitcoin is no different from the stock market or any other area where speculation reigns.
If on February 1st you knew ahead of everyone else that by now:
- Bitcoin would be accepted by Reddit (for Reddit Gold),
- and by Namecheap
- and that v0.8 would be released and widely adopted with no issues, and it solves the #1 reported issue (long wait for initial blockchain sync),
- and that 80% (by trading volume) of Mt. Gox's customer base would be getting "transitioned" over to a U.S.-based financial operator,
- and that any Fulfillment By Amazon (FBA) online store could accept bitcoin for payment
- and many of the other great developments occurring in Bitcoinland
then you might have considered all of these developments and gone all in ... betting the farm that these developments would boost the exchange rate ahead.
Some of these "surprises" were already expected due to rumors that had already been circling well ahead of the official announcements. There have been other rumors that have not played out too though, so not each piece of information can be taken at face value.
But one way that information is "signaled" is through price. So as the exchange rate rose in January up into the high teens on good volume and there was no apparent reason for it to do so, a rational trader might take note that others probably know something that has not yet been shared. When some of the positive developments emerged officially (e.g., Reddit gold) those that bought on the rumor generally then will sell on the news [being released]. When the exchange rate continued rising after the official announcements, that meant there was probably even more information about other developments that hadn't been shared.
Eventually when a significant development is announced (e.g., Fulfillment By Amazon support) and the exchange rate instead reverses and heads down, that probably means that finally most of the cards have been turned over. Then you might look for trading volume collapsing (except when selling off) which means nobody else is buying aggressively and thus there appears to not be much trading occurring based on information that other's don't yet have.
I'm not a daytrader and don't do much arbitrage so I'm not someone who really cares much if there's a 5% move up or down that might make for a trading opportunity. I generally try to add to a position after there's been a sharp selloff (still waiting) and also I try to lighten up a little when it seems that a rally fizzles out (like right now maybe). It is easy to make a wrong call though but everyone makes mistakes and hopefully learns from them.
To get a feel as far as what's important, try hanging out in the IRC channels #bitcoin-otc, #bitcoin-assets, #mtgox and maybe some others. Follow #bitcoin hashtag on Twitter. To some people Google Alerts is crucial. After a while you can start to know what information is signal and what information is noise. There is value in taking that information and gaining knowledge from it, hopefully resulting in the ability to make better trading decisions.