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Likewise, let's be honest. A 10% annual return on two contracts and their underlying value (same as if you had 200k in s&p mutual funds) is $20,000. With a 20k account and proper risk management that would be a 100% return. That is by no means "dreaming." I'm not saying it's easy, but it's funny how many people will act like it's impossible. In my opinion though, if one can't navigate the markets enough to get at least a 5-10% annual return consistently of the underlying assets they trade, you shouldn't be a trader and should just invest in mutual funds....
What you are missing in your analysis is the effect of VOLATILITY on LEVERAGE - seems it is hard for you to understand. You are not getting a cushy 5-10% on asset value in a straight line. Get some data. The S&P over the last 5 years has returned like 11% per year (compounded). Get the daily closes, and simulate how you would have fared with a 20:1 leverage and say 2% stop with 4% target (no stop/target of course until EOD). try some other leverage and stop %, and see. No need to theorize. I once did that over a 14 year SPY data, and it wasn't pretty!
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-- even today, in modern times, I'm sure there are traders who have performed just as stellar