Quote from Ripley:
Nobody in their right mind would do this for a living. How many people that went to college didn't have a right mind.
There ya go !!!
Quote from kalashnicac:
The question would be the same. There is no proof that it could be 99%.
Besides, don't forget that stock markets have a bullish bias : they mirror the country's economic evolution. As long as the economy is growing (faster than the inflation, that is), the markets will follow and investors will prosper. Had 100 traders invested in stocks 30 years ago without ever selling, they would probably be all successfull by now.
See that's the problem 90% losers percentage : on what basis?
Quote from Businessman:
I think 90% is probably too low, probably closer to
99% than 90%. Ofcourse i dont know for sure.
Only the brokers know and they dont say (we can only assume because the figures must be really bad)
we need a retail brokerage that opened say 10,000 actively traded
accounts over a 10 year period. Then you just need to know how
of those accounts were up or down when they were closed.
Quote from Riskmanager:
I've been working as a broker, now as a salestrader/prop.
90-95% of the customers are losing in futures trading, 70-80% in stock trading. And the commissions at the company were/are excellent from a customer's point of view.
Try to filter out symbols with average range, say, on 30 minute bars, that have reasonable ranges. That way you know that you can capture some movement that worth your while.
Quote from jnhighland:
Sorry for asking but a further explanation will be highly appreciated!![]()
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Quote from union1411:
why do people daytrade? it's not that hard to get into a top mba program (my current path) and shoot for an IB firm, assuming one is reasonably intelligent. the idea of paying some firm so i can trade is weird to me.
but hey what do i know . . .