I've known people who "invested" on the side and turned 20k into 750k in less than a year -- these numbers are not impossible considering how insane the markets have been in the recent past. In fact, it would not surprise me to learn that the 15K went to 500K or more (esp around 2000) before ending up at 250k.
That amount of capital is definitely enough to get started IMO. But I'd warn him that "trading on the side" and trading full time are completely different situations mentally; he will most likely not be as patient as he was before (when perhaps only the truly good opportunities caught his eye) now that he is trading for a living -- the pressure will be on to "make something happen", since that's his job now.
If he has already achieved good, steady results in the past, I hope he realizes that going full-time shouldn't necessarily change his methods at all, many times the best action to take is none at all. A good example is going to a "direct-access" broker from something like datek or e*trade -- is that really necessary for the time frame he's trading, or will it just turn his screen into a slot machine and suck him into scalping?
The only way to find out if this is the right thing to do as a career is to try. But he must realize that "going pro" doesn't mean much difference at all -- the way he "trades" now may actually be where most people who begin by scalping ticks want to eventually be. Good luck!
That amount of capital is definitely enough to get started IMO. But I'd warn him that "trading on the side" and trading full time are completely different situations mentally; he will most likely not be as patient as he was before (when perhaps only the truly good opportunities caught his eye) now that he is trading for a living -- the pressure will be on to "make something happen", since that's his job now.
If he has already achieved good, steady results in the past, I hope he realizes that going full-time shouldn't necessarily change his methods at all, many times the best action to take is none at all. A good example is going to a "direct-access" broker from something like datek or e*trade -- is that really necessary for the time frame he's trading, or will it just turn his screen into a slot machine and suck him into scalping?
The only way to find out if this is the right thing to do as a career is to try. But he must realize that "going pro" doesn't mean much difference at all -- the way he "trades" now may actually be where most people who begin by scalping ticks want to eventually be. Good luck!

