I am starting this thread because I wonder more and more if this is true. Did the failures really try? Did they get a market education before they began to trade large sums of money?
It takes a bachelors degree to be considered a "professional" in some fields. In fields where the potential payscale is that of a good trader > 100000K, the requirements are usually a PHD, which is at least 8 years.
If a person come up to you and says that he is a doctor, but has no license to practice, and does not heal you, is he a failed doctor, or is he simply a nut????
Can we truly call someone with an Ameritrade account and some spare time a trader?
So where does this 95% of all traders fail come from? Where is the statistic?
I postulate that actual traders, (as defined by solid knowledge, if not expertise, of price analysis, time analysis, volume analysis, news analysis and market psychology) fail at a rate in the single digits.
Why the double standard??
Regards
Oddi
It takes a bachelors degree to be considered a "professional" in some fields. In fields where the potential payscale is that of a good trader > 100000K, the requirements are usually a PHD, which is at least 8 years.
If a person come up to you and says that he is a doctor, but has no license to practice, and does not heal you, is he a failed doctor, or is he simply a nut????
Can we truly call someone with an Ameritrade account and some spare time a trader?
So where does this 95% of all traders fail come from? Where is the statistic?
I postulate that actual traders, (as defined by solid knowledge, if not expertise, of price analysis, time analysis, volume analysis, news analysis and market psychology) fail at a rate in the single digits.
Why the double standard??
Regards
Oddi