I owned a Commodity Brokerage in the ninties, we always tried the hardest to get longer term traders than day traders to open accounts. Cause if someone who was just starting out and was going to day trade, and this was before electronics came out/had to phone in orders, if they started in January, over 90% were gone by June. And I would believe now with easy access and higher comission rates (Big S&P500 was $500 a point back then and cost was $16 to $40), fees are generally higher today in the Emini's but lower in most other markets. Newbies get in/out much faster now, and more often which depletes the account even if they are breakeven on the day.
Good traders either go to deep discounts brokers, lease a seat or buy.
I think the "95%" might actually be a little low, I think the upper 2% are the huge winners whether it is in trading or just about anything done in life. It takes a great deal of hard long hours of work of thinking "outside the bun" to preservere in one's field of study to do well.
Most people work for a living, hate their jobs, have next to nothing for retirement and have to retire in their seventies. I won't label them as failures, but they certainly not the upper 2%ers.
Good traders either go to deep discounts brokers, lease a seat or buy.
I think the "95%" might actually be a little low, I think the upper 2% are the huge winners whether it is in trading or just about anything done in life. It takes a great deal of hard long hours of work of thinking "outside the bun" to preservere in one's field of study to do well.
Most people work for a living, hate their jobs, have next to nothing for retirement and have to retire in their seventies. I won't label them as failures, but they certainly not the upper 2%ers.