Table of Contents
- What is Intraday Trading?
- Before You Start: Essential Foundations
- Strategy 1: Moving Average Crossover
- Strategy 2: Breakout Trading
- Strategy 3: Momentum Scalping
- Strategy 4: VWAP Mean Reversion
- Strategy 5: Opening Range Breakout (ORB)
- Strategy 6: Gap Trading Strategy
- Strategy 7: RSI Divergence Trading
- Risk Management: The Master Skill
- Trading Psychology for Day Traders
- Tools and Platforms for Intraday Trading
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion
What is Intraday Trading?
Intraday trading, also known as day trading, involves buying and selling financial instruments within the same trading day. Unlike investors who hold positions for weeks, months, or years, intraday traders close all positions before the market closes, carrying no overnight risk. In the Indian stock market context, this means entering and exiting all positions between 9:15 AM and 3:30 PM IST on the NSE and BSE.
For forex traders, intraday trading follows a similar principle but benefits from the 24-hour nature of the forex market. You might enter a EUR/USD trade during the London session and close it before the New York session ends. The lack of a fixed closing time gives forex day traders more flexibility in choosing when to trade based on their preferred market conditions and time zone.
Intraday trading is particularly popular in India for several reasons. The availability of margin (leverage) means traders can control positions worth 5-20 times their capital on domestic exchanges and even more through international forex brokers. A trader with 50,000 INR in their account might control positions worth 5,00,000 INR or more, amplifying both potential profits and losses proportionally.
The appeal of daily income potential attracts many Indians to intraday trading. However, the reality is that it requires significant skill, discipline, and emotional control. Studies consistently show that the majority of day traders -- across all markets and countries -- lose money. The strategies outlined in this guide are designed to give beginners a structured framework, but success ultimately depends on discipline, practice, and continuous learning.
Before You Start: Essential Foundations
Before diving into specific strategies, every beginner must establish these foundations. Skipping this step is the primary reason most new traders fail within their first year.
Capital Requirements
For Indian stock market intraday trading, a starting capital of at least 50,000-1,00,000 INR is recommended. This provides enough margin to take meaningful positions while keeping risk per trade at manageable levels. For forex trading through international brokers like Exness, you can start with as little as $10 (~840 INR), but a more practical starting capital is $100-$500 (~8,400-42,000 INR) to allow proper position sizing.
Choosing Your Market
- Indian Stocks (NSE/BSE): Best for traders who prefer the structured 9:15 AM - 3:30 PM IST trading window. Focus on Nifty 50 stocks and Bank Nifty for adequate liquidity. SEBI-regulated through domestic brokers.
- Currency Derivatives (NSE): Trade USD/INR and other INR pairs during exchange hours. Lower margin requirements than equity derivatives.
- Forex (International Brokers): 24-hour market access, highest leverage availability, tightest spreads on major pairs. Best for traders who want flexibility in timing and instrument selection.
- Index Futures (NSE): Nifty and Bank Nifty futures offer excellent liquidity and are among the most actively traded derivatives in the world.
Demo Account Practice
Every beginner should spend a minimum of 2-3 months trading on a demo account before risking real capital. Most international forex brokers including Exness offer free demo accounts with virtual money that simulate real market conditions. On the domestic side, platforms like Zerodha Streak allow strategy backtesting without live market risk.
The 2-3 Month Rule: Trade a demo account for at least 2-3 months. Track your results meticulously. Only graduate to a live account when you can show consistent profitability over at least 60 trading sessions. If you cannot make money in a demo, you will not make money live.
Strategy 1: Moving Average Crossover
The Moving Average Crossover is one of the most widely used intraday strategies worldwide. It is simple to understand, easy to implement, and effective in trending markets. This strategy uses two Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) of different periods to generate buy and sell signals.
Setup
- Chart Timeframe: 5-minute or 15-minute chart
- Indicators: 9-period EMA (fast) and 21-period EMA (slow)
- Confirmation: Volume indicator (above average confirms signal strength)
Entry Rules
- Buy Signal: When the 9-EMA crosses above the 21-EMA, and the crossover occurs above the previous candle's high. Volume should be above the 20-period average.
- Sell Signal: When the 9-EMA crosses below the 21-EMA, and the crossover occurs below the previous candle's low. Again, confirm with above-average volume.
Exit Rules
- Stop-Loss: Place the stop-loss at the most recent swing low (for buy trades) or swing high (for sell trades), typically 15-30 pips for forex or 0.3-0.5% for stocks.
- Take-Profit: Target a minimum 1.5:1 reward-to-risk ratio. If your stop is 20 pips, your target should be at least 30 pips.
- Trailing Stop: Once the trade moves 1:1 in your favor, move the stop to breakeven. Trail the stop using the 21-EMA as a guide.
This strategy works best during trending sessions. Avoid using it during the first 15 minutes of the Indian stock market session (9:15-9:30 AM IST) when volatility is erratic, or during low-liquidity periods in forex (Asian session for European pairs). The key advantage is simplicity -- you have a clear, mechanical signal that removes emotional decision-making from the process.
Strategy 2: Breakout Trading
Breakout trading capitalizes on price movements that occur when a financial instrument breaks through a defined support or resistance level with increased momentum. This is one of the most popular strategies among Indian intraday traders, particularly effective on Nifty, Bank Nifty, and major forex pairs like EUR/USD and USD/INR.
Identifying Breakout Levels
- Previous Day's High/Low: The previous trading day's high and low act as natural support and resistance levels. A break above yesterday's high or below yesterday's low often triggers momentum.
- Consolidation Zones: When price trades in a narrow range for 30 minutes or more, a breakout from this range in either direction can produce strong moves.
- Round Numbers: Psychological levels like Nifty 23,000, EUR/USD 1.1000, or USD/INR 84.00 often act as support/resistance. Breakouts through these levels can trigger stops and momentum.
- Pivot Points: Calculated from the previous day's high, low, and close. The central pivot, support (S1, S2, S3), and resistance (R1, R2, R3) levels provide objective reference points.
Entry and Exit Framework
- Entry: Enter on a candle close above/below the breakout level. Wait for the candle to close rather than entering at the first touch -- this filters out false breakouts.
- Volume Confirmation: The breakout candle should have volume at least 1.5 times the average of the previous 20 candles. Low-volume breakouts frequently fail.
- Stop-Loss: Place it on the opposite side of the breakout level plus a small buffer (5-10 pips for forex, 10-20 points for Nifty).
- Target: Measure the height of the consolidation range and project it from the breakout point. This gives you a measured move target with a statistical edge.
False Breakout Alert: Approximately 60-70% of breakouts fail, meaning price breaks through a level but then reverses back into the range. This is why volume confirmation and waiting for a candle close are essential. Some experienced traders specifically trade false breakouts, entering in the opposite direction when a breakout fails -- but this requires more experience and faster reflexes.
Strategy 3: Momentum Scalping
Scalping is the fastest form of intraday trading, aiming to capture small price movements of 5-15 pips in forex or 5-20 points on Nifty. Scalpers may execute 20-50 trades per session, holding each position for just seconds to a few minutes. This strategy requires fast execution, tight spreads, and exceptional discipline.
Requirements for Scalping
- Broker: You need a broker with ultra-tight spreads and fast execution. Exness Raw Spread account offers spreads from 0.0 pips on major pairs, making it ideal for scalping. For Indian markets, a broker with low per-trade costs (like Zerodha at 20 INR per order) is essential.
- Platform: MetaTrader 4 or 5 with one-click trading enabled. Execution speed is critical -- even a one-second delay can mean the difference between profit and loss.
- Internet: A stable, high-speed connection is non-negotiable. A 4G/5G mobile connection can work but wired broadband is preferred for reliability.
- Focus: Scalping demands intense concentration. Most scalpers trade for 2-3 hours maximum before mental fatigue degrades performance.
Execution Framework
- Timeframe: 1-minute chart with a 5-minute chart for trend direction
- Indicators: 8-EMA and 21-EMA on 1-minute chart, MACD histogram for momentum confirmation
- Entry: Trade only in the direction of the 5-minute trend. Enter on 1-minute EMA crossover with MACD histogram confirming momentum direction
- Stop-Loss: 5-10 pips maximum (forex) or 5-10 points (Nifty). If a scalp moves against you beyond this, exit immediately.
- Take-Profit: 8-15 pips (forex) or 10-20 points (Nifty). The reward-to-risk ratio can be lower than other strategies because the win rate should be higher (65%+ target).
- Daily Limit: Set a maximum daily loss of 2-3% of capital. Stop trading for the day if this limit is reached, regardless of how you feel.
Strategy 4: VWAP Mean Reversion
The Volume Weighted Average Price (VWAP) is one of the most powerful tools for intraday traders. Institutional traders -- the entities that move markets -- frequently use VWAP as a benchmark for their executions. Understanding how price interacts with VWAP gives retail traders an edge in understanding institutional order flow.
How VWAP Works
VWAP calculates the average price of an instrument weighted by volume throughout the trading day. Unlike a simple moving average, VWAP gives more weight to price levels where more trading occurred. It resets at the beginning of each trading day (9:15 AM IST for Indian markets) and builds throughout the session.
Mean Reversion Strategy
- Concept: Price tends to revert to VWAP when it extends too far from it. This strategy buys when price dips significantly below VWAP and sells when it rallies significantly above it.
- Buy Setup: Price is above VWAP on the daily trend (indicating bullish bias). Price pulls back to VWAP or slightly below (within 0.1-0.3%). A bullish reversal candle forms (hammer, engulfing, or pin bar). Enter long with stop below the reversal candle's low.
- Sell Setup: Price is below VWAP on the daily trend (bearish bias). Price rallies to VWAP or slightly above. A bearish reversal candle forms. Enter short with stop above the reversal candle's high.
- Target: The previous swing high (for longs) or swing low (for shorts) from where the reversion to VWAP began.
This strategy works exceptionally well on liquid instruments like Nifty futures, Bank Nifty, and major forex pairs. It performs best during the middle portion of the trading day (11:00 AM - 1:30 PM IST for Indian stocks) when the initial volatility has settled but directional moves are still developing.
Strategy 5: Opening Range Breakout (ORB)
The Opening Range Breakout is a time-tested strategy that is particularly effective in the Indian stock market. It capitalizes on the fact that the first 15-30 minutes of trading often establish the range for much of the day. A breakout from this range in either direction frequently results in a sustained move.
Implementation
- Step 1: Mark the high and low of the first 15 minutes of trading (9:15 AM - 9:30 AM IST for Indian markets). This is your "Opening Range."
- Step 2: Wait for price to break convincingly above the range high or below the range low. "Convincingly" means a full candle close beyond the level, not just a wick.
- Step 3: Enter in the direction of the breakout. Place a stop-loss at the midpoint of the opening range. If the range is 100 points wide, your stop is 50 points from entry.
- Step 4: Target 1.5 to 2 times the range width. A 100-point opening range suggests a 150-200 point move from the breakout point.
The ORB strategy has a long track record of success on Indian indices. Studies on Nifty data show that when the opening range is narrower than average, the subsequent breakout tends to be larger and more reliable. Conversely, a very wide opening range often leads to a choppy, range-bound day that is less suitable for this strategy.
Strategy 6: Gap Trading Strategy
Gaps occur when a stock or index opens at a price significantly different from the previous day's close. In the Indian stock market, gaps are frequent due to overnight global market movements, corporate announcements, and economic data releases. Understanding gap behavior can provide reliable trading opportunities.
Types of Gaps
- Gap Up: Today's open is above yesterday's high. Bullish signal, but the gap may "fill" (price retraces to yesterday's close).
- Gap Down: Today's open is below yesterday's low. Bearish signal, but gaps down often present buying opportunities when they fill.
- Full Gap: Open is above/below the previous day's entire range (high or low).
- Partial Gap: Open is above/below the previous close but still within the previous day's range.
Gap Fill Strategy
Statistics show that approximately 70-80% of gaps fill within the same trading day. This means if Nifty opens 100 points above yesterday's close, there is a 70-80% chance it will trade back down to touch yesterday's closing level at some point during the day. This statistical edge forms the basis of the gap fill strategy.
- Entry: Wait 15 minutes after market open. If the gap is starting to fill (price moving in the direction of yesterday's close), enter a trade targeting the gap fill.
- Stop-Loss: Place the stop above the day's high (for gap fill short) or below the day's low (for gap fill long).
- Target: Yesterday's closing price -- the complete gap fill level.
- Avoid: Do not trade gap fills on days with major news events or earnings announcements, as these can create "breakaway gaps" that do not fill.
Strategy 7: RSI Divergence Trading
RSI (Relative Strength Index) divergence is a powerful technique for identifying potential trend reversals. When price makes a new high but the RSI makes a lower high (bearish divergence), or when price makes a new low but RSI makes a higher low (bullish divergence), it signals weakening momentum and a potential reversal.
Setup and Rules
- Timeframe: 15-minute chart (works well on both stocks and forex)
- RSI Setting: 14-period RSI (default setting)
- Bullish Divergence Entry: Price makes a lower low while RSI makes a higher low. Wait for a bullish candle to confirm the reversal. Enter long on the close of the confirmation candle.
- Bearish Divergence Entry: Price makes a higher high while RSI makes a lower high. Wait for a bearish candle to confirm. Enter short on the close of the confirmation candle.
- Stop-Loss: Below the divergence low (for longs) or above the divergence high (for shorts).
- Target: The nearest significant support or resistance level, or use a 2:1 reward-to-risk ratio.
RSI divergence signals are most reliable when they occur at significant support or resistance levels, when RSI is in overbought (above 70) or oversold (below 30) territory, and when confirmed by volume. Avoid trading divergence during strong trending moves, as divergence can persist for extended periods in a powerful trend.
Practice These Strategies Risk-Free
Open a free demo account with Exness and test these strategies with virtual funds. No risk, real market conditions.
Open Demo AccountRisk Management: The Master Skill
Risk management is not just one component of successful trading -- it is the most important component. Every consistently profitable trader will tell you that their risk management system is what keeps them in the game long enough to let their edge play out over hundreds and thousands of trades.
The 1% Rule
Never risk more than 1% of your trading capital on a single trade. If you have a 1,00,000 INR trading account, your maximum loss on any single trade should be 1,000 INR. This rule ensures that even a streak of 10 consecutive losing trades (which happens to every trader eventually) only draws down your account by approximately 10%. At 2% risk per trade, 10 consecutive losses would cost approximately 18% of your capital.
Position Sizing Formula
Position size = (Account Risk Amount) / (Stop-Loss Distance in Points * Point Value)
Example: 1,00,000 INR account, 1% risk = 1,000 INR maximum risk per trade. If trading EUR/USD with a 20-pip stop-loss on Exness (where 1 pip = $0.10 per micro lot), your position size would be: 1,000 INR / (20 pips * $0.10 * 84 INR/$) = 5.95 micro lots. Round down to 5 micro lots.
Daily Loss Limits
Set a maximum daily loss limit of 3% of your capital. If you lose 3,000 INR on a 1,00,000 INR account in a single day, close your platform and walk away. This prevents emotional revenge trading, which is the single biggest account killer for day traders.
Risk-to-Reward Ratio
Always trade with a minimum 1.5:1 reward-to-risk ratio. This means for every 1 INR you risk, you target at least 1.50 INR in profit. With this ratio, you only need to win 40% of your trades to be profitable. Most of the strategies outlined above target a 2:1 ratio, meaning you only need a 33% win rate to break even.
Trading Psychology for Day Traders
The mental aspect of intraday trading is what separates consistently profitable traders from the majority who lose money. Understanding these psychological pitfalls is essential for long-term success.
Common Psychological Traps
- Revenge Trading: Taking impulsive trades after a loss to "win back" the money. This almost always leads to larger losses. The solution is your daily loss limit -- when hit, stop trading.
- FOMO (Fear of Missing Out): Entering trades without proper analysis because "the move looks strong." Missing a trade costs you nothing. Entering a bad trade costs you money.
- Overtrading: Taking too many trades, often out of boredom or the desire for action. Quality over quantity. Some of the best trading days involve only 1-3 well-chosen trades.
- Moving Stop-Losses: Widening your stop-loss when price approaches it, hoping it will reverse. This violates your risk management and leads to catastrophic losses.
- Confirmation Bias: Only looking for information that supports your trade thesis while ignoring signals that suggest you are wrong. Always consider what would invalidate your trade idea.
Tools and Platforms for Intraday Trading
Having the right tools significantly improves your intraday trading execution and analysis.
Recommended Platform Setup
- For Forex (International): Exness with MetaTrader 5 -- offers the fastest execution, tightest spreads from 0.0 pips, and instant INR deposits via UPI. The combination provides institutional-grade conditions accessible from India with minimal capital.
- For Indian Stocks/Indices: Zerodha Kite with its built-in TradingView charts provides everything you need for domestic market trading. The Zerodha Streak tool allows basic strategy automation and backtesting.
- Charting: TradingView (free and paid plans) offers the most comprehensive charting platform accessible from any browser. It supports all the indicators and drawing tools needed for every strategy in this guide.
- Economic Calendar: Forex Factory, Investing.com, or the Exness in-app calendar for tracking market-moving events. Never be surprised by scheduled news releases.
- Trading Journal: Track every trade with entry, exit, stop-loss, reason for entry, and lessons learned. A simple spreadsheet works, or use dedicated tools like Edgewonk or TraderVue.
Get the Best Trading Conditions for Intraday
Trade with Exness -- ultra-tight spreads, fast execution, and instant INR deposits. Ideal for all the strategies outlined above.
Open Your AccountFrequently Asked Questions
How much money do I need to start intraday trading in India?
For Indian stock market intraday trading, 50,000 to 1,00,000 INR provides a reasonable starting capital. For forex trading through international brokers, you can start with as little as $10 (~840 INR) on Exness, though $100-$500 is more practical for proper position sizing with these strategies.
What is the best time frame for intraday trading?
The 15-minute chart offers the best balance of signal quality and trade frequency for most beginners. Advanced traders may use 5-minute or even 1-minute charts for scalping. Use higher timeframes (1-hour, 4-hour) to determine the overall trend direction before trading on lower timeframes.
Can I do intraday trading as a full-time job?
Yes, but it requires substantial preparation. You need sufficient capital (ideally 5,00,000+ INR for Indian markets), a proven strategy tested over hundreds of trades, emotional discipline, and a financial cushion to cover living expenses during unprofitable periods. Start part-time while maintaining other income sources.
Which strategy is best for beginners?
The Moving Average Crossover (Strategy 1) and Opening Range Breakout (Strategy 5) are the most beginner-friendly due to their clear, mechanical rules. They remove subjectivity from the decision-making process, which is important when you are still developing your market intuition.
How many trades should I take per day?
Quality matters more than quantity. Most successful intraday traders take 2-5 high-quality trades per day. Scalpers may take more (10-30), but each trade follows strict criteria. If your strategy is not generating signals, do nothing. The ability to sit on your hands and wait for proper setups is a hallmark of professional traders.
Conclusion
Intraday trading offers the potential for daily income from the financial markets, but it is not a shortcut to wealth. The seven strategies outlined in this guide provide a solid foundation for beginners to start developing their trading skills. Each strategy has specific market conditions where it excels, and no single strategy works in all environments.
The most important takeaways from this guide are: always practice on a demo account before risking real money; never risk more than 1-2% of your capital on a single trade; set daily loss limits and honor them without exception; focus on mastering one strategy at a time rather than switching between many; and keep a detailed trading journal to track your progress and identify areas for improvement.
Success in intraday trading is a marathon, not a sprint. Most profitable traders went through months or years of learning, losing, and refining their approach before achieving consistency. Be patient with yourself, remain committed to continuous improvement, and always protect your capital above all else. Your capital is the tool of your trade -- without it, the game is over.