Unless you have experience trading won't the Prop Firm demand you pony up $10,000 to $50,000 of your own capital to cover potential losses? I got a email from a firm offering to train me (I could use some additional Risk-Management pounded in my brain, I had some very beautiful trades last week but I allowed most of my profit for a ten-day Swing-Trade to destroy most of his profit because of two really stupid trades. I was up $1700 for the week (Previously I was up $7000 on my CONN, V, MA, AKS, X Calls until I deviated from my plan and threw away $5300 trading some radical stocks I had no business involved in.).
I wonder if a Prop Shop would help me to get my Risk Management under control? Overall, I am profitable but allow one or two trades to come in and hammer me after playing 9.5 out of 10 trades by the book. I wish I could destroy that little demon who pops in my head and erodes a good, one to two weeks worth of Swing-trades. It's very frustrating, hope you get a job with a prop, I will try to look for the email I was sent offering to trade the firm's capital and not my own, if I spend over 300 hours on studying their culture and taking test (Series 51? Exam?) they will allow me to trade.
If I was to join a Prop Shop do you think it would be a good idea to show them how consistent my win-loss ratio is or would it be best to pretend I know nothing about trading and allow them to teach me, act like I have no preconceived notions or presuppositions about Trading? I did not see some of the Firms that usually claim you don't have to provide "Trading Insurance (skin in the game)" on your list, hope you get a good job dude!
I wonder if a Prop Shop would help me to get my Risk Management under control? Overall, I am profitable but allow one or two trades to come in and hammer me after playing 9.5 out of 10 trades by the book. I wish I could destroy that little demon who pops in my head and erodes a good, one to two weeks worth of Swing-trades. It's very frustrating, hope you get a job with a prop, I will try to look for the email I was sent offering to trade the firm's capital and not my own, if I spend over 300 hours on studying their culture and taking test (Series 51? Exam?) they will allow me to trade.
If I was to join a Prop Shop do you think it would be a good idea to show them how consistent my win-loss ratio is or would it be best to pretend I know nothing about trading and allow them to teach me, act like I have no preconceived notions or presuppositions about Trading? I did not see some of the Firms that usually claim you don't have to provide "Trading Insurance (skin in the game)" on your list, hope you get a good job dude!