i do not have a systemNo you will not be able to make money. You can not consistently make money. A working system will stop working in the future and you will keep trading your so called consistently profitable system.
i know how market works
i do not have a systemNo you will not be able to make money. You can not consistently make money. A working system will stop working in the future and you will keep trading your so called consistently profitable system.
see my statementI'm saying it's not possible and forex market is random...
i agreeI'm saying it's possible and forex market is not random...
You are kidding right? Trading is not easy to learn? There is up, down, sideways. Trending, mean-reverting. Continuous vs jumps. Dividends, interest rate math (7th grade level math), discounting future cash flow valuations. Sorry but anyone who does not comprehend that should probably work at Mac Donald's. Trading is as simple as a simple computer game. I always laugh when I hear some guys talk about the market as if there was anything complex to it. It's utterly ridiculous. Why do you think some of the stupidest people on earth are drawn to trading like flies to a pile of shit? It's because it's as simple as it gets. And because the barriers of entry are virtually absent. And the lure of money.
Trading is not about complexities or difficult environments. It's up down or sideways. Trading is all about patience at some time, and quick acting in the face of a loss at other times, it's all about mental capacity and the ability to tune out feelings. Stop attaching any complexities to this industry.
And you get again hung up on issues that are not there but you read into them due to his poor English. Obviously he cannot mean that NOBODY can be successful at trading. If he indeed meant that you should not even waste your precious time on him as he is clearly contradicted (not by anyone at ET, mind you).
It can only be completely random or not random at all? Says who? Link to reference please. Because in my many years as student of advanced measure theory and probabilistic concepts I have not come across such statement. But let me prove you wrong with a simple example: imagine a price function that is driven by a stochastic component and also a deterministic component. If you understand both terms just mentioned then you know already that your claim is bogus. And by the way, I did not even talk about whether markets are either completely random or not at all random. I stated that markets are most of the times following a highly random path and very few times are markets inefficient.
very low rate of trader success borders on the absurd.
if they believe it is truly random, they should be trading because in a truly random situation, you will not lose money in the long run.Lastly, if anyone truly believes the market is random,
You are conflating the "mechanics" and descriptors of trading with the ability to trade at a level to be consistently profitable.
No one complaining about trading being hard is talking about the "rules" or trading nomenclature. That should be obvious so to make a claim that trading is "easy" when statistics point out to a very low rate of trader success borders on the absurd. Trading difficulty is typically referenced on the ability to consistently make a profit, not on being familiar with the mechanics or terms. When someone says trading is "hard", we assume they are not making money, not that they don't know how to use a brokerage account.
These are the OP's words:
1) There's no profitable system
2) You will not be able to make money
3) You can't be consistently profitable
If you for some reason attribute what he said with an ESL issue, that's your choice. I chose to respond according to his actual statements without assuming they needed interpretation. They appear pretty direct and clear to me.
Lastly, if anyone truly believes the market is random, then they shouldn't be trading since a random market makes it impossible for price forecasting and patterns can't be expected to exist. I'd hate to try to be profitable by only trying to find market inefficiencies in the age of trading supercomputers and algorithms able to operate at speeds well beyond human capability.
I guess it comes down to the old quest of whether trading can be taught or not. I claim it cannot.
William Eckhardt did lose that bet