You can easily create a table variable within a stored proc:
CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.StoredProcedure1
AS
DECLARE @DailyPricingAndVolBySymbolType TABLE (TradeDate date,
Symbol varchar(120), O smallmoney, H smallmoney, L smallmoney, C smallmoney,
Vol bigint)
Or create a temp table:
CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.StoredProcedure1
AS
CREATE TABLE #DailyPricingAndVolBySymbolType (TradeDate date,
Symbol varchar(120), O smallmoney, H smallmoney, L smallmoney, C smallmoney,
Vol bigint)
But creating a table type within the procedure makes no real sense, so far as I can see. If you were to create a new type within the procedure, nothing external could know of that type.
Based on your edits:
If it were possible to define a table type within a stored procedure, then based on other SQL Server behaviors, I wouldn't expect that same type to be available a) to other contexts, and b) after the stored proc's execution ends. That would be consistent with e.g. temp tables, and hence why I don't think it would be useful.
CREATE TYPE...
the right thing to do?