Quote from bbmat:
Come on guys,
if you define a trader as someone with all the qualities mentioned in a post before then there is barely any trader around, except the ones at professional firms (I do not include prop firms amongst professional firms).
About the percentage. Who cares about the exact number? First of all, it will NEVER be possible to determine any accurate numbers as none can compile statistics that could come up with the figures. Think about historical data: There is just a handful of professional studies since the inception of futures trading that investigate the profitability of small traders/large traders/ hedgers. Also, there is no historical data on options with different strikes. So, you are asking for data on people who failed in trading and believe anyone would admit their failure?
I firmly believe that the losers must be above the 90% mark of the total of traders, otherwise where, do you think, does the money, those few successful traders make on a consistent basis come from? I am also 100% sure that almost any purely technical trader over a 10 year period will fail. Now, count the traders who pretend trading on purely technical terms: Its the masses!!! Anyone can claim to have made money over some time and be right. But investigate that individual's performance over the long term. If they still make money then they must belong to the top 5% or so.
Trading is no fun thing and not easy at all. Trading is a tough job. But most people especially at ET believe that they can implement some system put their feet on the desk and relax and watch the moneystreams coming in. Anyone who claims that trading with such attitude works is a liar but most above all plain stupid. I love that person anyhow because that may just be that person's money I will take from him/her today. I do not claim all guys at ET to put forth such attitude but there are surely unbelievably many. If you don't believe me then investigate the posts at ET yourself.
Another way of coming up with an interesting %: If you believe that ET represents members of average intelligence and intellect among all traders just get to some popular threads, count the number of intelligent/useful posts and compare to the rest. Define by yourself what you feel is useful and what not. I myself feel supported with by 5% guess by the no. of quality posts at ET.
Quote from oddiduro:
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
Quote from oddiduro:
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
Quote from tanp21:
I love the people who make it sound so easy.
1. Get an edge.
2. Money/Risk Management.
3. Discipline.
Well I for one am not sure that number 1 is ture unless number 2 is your number 1. Money/Risk Management is the only definable constant.
There are different schools of thought on getting an edge: This is not poker where most hands have a set percentage of winning.
I wish it was.
Price patterns are great untill they don't work anymore. Support and Resistance works sometimes.
I think the most important thing is keeping a favorable risk to reward ratio with a solid risk managment plan. I am not sure there is anything more than that.
I guess you can do one more thing to get a 51/49% advantage: buy on any bar that is rising and sell anybar that is falling. However if your stop is to close then the ratio gets scewed, it will not be a 50/50 chance anymore.
I would love to know how anyone can prove to have an edge other then number 2 as stated.