Understanding Investing vs. Trading: Goals, Time Horizons, and Trade-Offs

Develop a clear mental model for the fundamental differences between long-term investing and short-term trading — their goals, psychological demands, risk profiles, and appropriate contexts.

⏱ 1h 32m 📚 12 lessons

About this course

People frequently use the terms investing and trading interchangeably, but they represent fundamentally different activities with different objectives, time horizons, skill requirements, and emotional demands. Conflating them leads to confusion: an investor who panic-sells during a correction is applying trading instincts to an investing position, and a trader who holds a losing position because they believe in the company long-term is doing the same in reverse. By the end of this course you will be able to define the core characteristics that distinguish long-term investing from short-term trading, evaluate which approach aligns with a given set of personal and financial circumstances, and explain the key risks and behavioural challenges associated with each. What you will learn: - Defining long-term investing: wealth building through compounding, time horizon, and fundamental value - Defining short-term trading: capitalising on price volatility, time horizon, and technical and market structure signals - Comparing risk profiles: volatility tolerance, capital requirements, and probability of loss over different holding periods - Day trading, swing trading, and value investing as representative approaches within each category - The evidence on retail trading outcomes: what research shows about individual trader performance over time - How psychological demands differ: patience and conviction vs. discipline and rapid decision-making - Choosing an approach: how financial goals, available time, capital, and temperament should guide the decision - Combining both in a single financial life: when it makes sense and how to keep them structurally separate The course presents each concept through focused readings, supported by case studies that trace a hypothetical individual applying each approach across different market conditions. Self-assessment exercises help you evaluate your own preferences and constraints honestly. Reflection prompts guide you toward a clear personal position on which approach — or which combination — is appropriate for your situation. This course is designed for individuals who are new to financial markets and want to orient themselves before deciding how to proceed. No prior knowledge is required. This content is purely educational and informational; it does not constitute financial advice.

What you'll get

  • 📜 Certificate of completion
    Add it to your LinkedIn profile
  • 💬 Personal AI tutor
    Stuck on a lesson? Ask your built-in tutor anything, any time.
  • ♾️ Lifetime access
    Come back anytime, no expiry
  • 📱 Phone or computer
    Works anywhere, any device
  • 💸 30-day refund
    No questions asked
  • Short & focused
    1h 32m of practical content

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Frequently asked

What do I need to take this course? +

Just a phone or computer with internet. No installs, no special hardware.

How do I pay? +

By card via Stripe, or with cryptocurrency. We do not store card details — Stripe handles them securely.

Can I get a refund? +

Yes — full refund within 30 days, no questions asked.

How long will I have access? +

Forever. Once you purchase, the course is yours to revisit anytime.

Will I get a certificate? +

Yes. On completion you'll receive a certificate you can add to your LinkedIn profile.

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