This is a common midlife crisis pattern.
A 30 or 40 something year old has worked hard in a well paying day job saved decent money. But has now become disillusioned or bored with the day job. Working for annoying bosses or annoying customers.
I also think it has something to do with wealth growth . When you start out working in your early 20s, each year your wealth increases massively compared to the broke 20 year old you. But by your mid 30s, the income you manage to save from the day job is only adding say 10% a year to your now much larger wealth.
This is when the allure of trading comes in, no annoying bosses or customers and the prospect of big wealth growth again.
The risk is you go in as a relatively young high earning 35 year old, with most of your life still ahead, you come out ten years laters, cash poorer with your best years now behind you.
I met this full time trader a few years ago. Single, no wife or family. In his mid 30s he was earning around 200K a year as a contractor. He had stopped doing that and became a full time trader for 10 years, never made any money from trading from what i could tell.
A 30 or 40 something year old has worked hard in a well paying day job saved decent money. But has now become disillusioned or bored with the day job. Working for annoying bosses or annoying customers.
I also think it has something to do with wealth growth . When you start out working in your early 20s, each year your wealth increases massively compared to the broke 20 year old you. But by your mid 30s, the income you manage to save from the day job is only adding say 10% a year to your now much larger wealth.
This is when the allure of trading comes in, no annoying bosses or customers and the prospect of big wealth growth again.
The risk is you go in as a relatively young high earning 35 year old, with most of your life still ahead, you come out ten years laters, cash poorer with your best years now behind you.
I met this full time trader a few years ago. Single, no wife or family. In his mid 30s he was earning around 200K a year as a contractor. He had stopped doing that and became a full time trader for 10 years, never made any money from trading from what i could tell.
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b/c doing diversification at say 5% level means to have 20 spreads open (ideally each using a different ticker), meaning 40 positions at minimum (2-leg spreads). Handling and managing that much positions can only be done by a program, IMO...