a theory about good vs. bad traders

I have found that bad traders talk about the time they made a big score.
Good traders talk about their losses and what they learned.

I think this mindset applies to many aspects of life (or performance related occupations)…it’s ultimately why there are elite performers and a vast majority of also rans
 
Just because i am sore when losing and want to blab about it does not make me a good trader. People come in all colors and one rule fits all usually fails.

Of course it doesn’t, but if you’ve ever been around the types of people who are ready excuse makers, then you can relate to the point the OP is trying to make.
 
I had to listen to a 64 year old Terry Brad talk about all his amazing scores. He did not once mention his failures at a pep rally I went to. Was he a bad Q? He seethed arrogance and hubris!

Those teams pre free agency were basically all pros at every position…could make the case that he was a reasonably decent qb surrounded by world class talent at a time where they had a dynasty
 
I think this mindset applies to many aspects of life (or performance related occupations)…it’s ultimately why there are elite performers and a vast majority of also rans
In the late 90s and early 2000s I enjoyed playing bullet chess, had a ok rating for my goals. There was a mean, nasty trash talking kid who loved killing us on Chessdotcom. He became World Champ! I guess being nasty and trash talking about “being the greatest” did not affect Nak.
 
In the late 90s and early 2000s I enjoyed playing bullet chess, had a ok rating for my goals. There was a mean, nasty trash talking kid who loved killing us on Chessdotcom. He became World Champ! I guess being nasty and trash talking about “being the greatest” did not affect Nak.

If ya got talent, ya got talent…
 
I guess there will be another thread :

The fact about good vs. bad traders

along those lines i always thought trading should be an olympic/ esports event

have each country send a team, eg. 4-5 of their top traders and have them trade sessions throughout the summer televised in front of a world audience

my predicted rankings would be,
#1 - US, bc the team would prob have a decent edge but also be the most confident in using leverage
#2 - Japan, they seem to have quite good day traders (eg along the lines of BNF, CIS, tesuta), but prob would be a bit more conservative in leverage
#3 - wildcard, maybe a tossup between France (bc the ecoles guys seem to always come up with esoteric but somewhat profitable trades, that few others are doing) and Australia (bc they seem the most detached/ able to cynically trade regardless of central bank positioning)

lol tongue in cheek only
 
"TRY" or "WILL", these two words are simple but they are difference between those who are CEO's and majority of people who work under them.

Same with trading.
 
I have found that bad traders talk about the time they made a big score.
Good traders talk about their losses and what they learned.

I think this may be true, but good traders also know what they are doing, and refrain from trying new things until they are tested and proven. I like how you follow your system. :)
 
along those lines i always thought trading should be an olympic/ esports event

have each country send a team, eg. 4-5 of their top traders and have them trade sessions throughout the summer televised in front of a world audience

my predicted rankings would be,
#1 - US, bc the team would prob have a decent edge but also be the most confident in using leverage
#2 - Japan, they seem to have quite good day traders (eg along the lines of BNF, CIS, tesuta), but prob would be a bit more conservative in leverage
#3 - wildcard, maybe a tossup between France (bc the ecoles guys seem to always come up with esoteric but somewhat profitable trades, that few others are doing) and Australia (bc they seem the most detached/ able to cynically trade regardless of central bank positioning)

lol tongue in cheek only

If you look at top banks and hedge funds within these asset classes, it generally falls along these lines (geographically): London is probably the best for macro traders (rates, fx, macro relative value, etc.). Hong Kong and Singapore are the best for EM FX and EM Rates, probably because the beta is so good (lots of healthy, growing, economies). The US is the best for equities and vol, though credit derivatives is notoriously french.

Going back to the first post -- you can easily tell if someone is a hobbyist because they have a very shallow understanding of markets and yet are very confident that they understand them lol.
 
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