Don : All shares in excess of 2500 per trade are absolutely free to the traders (no money for firm, period!)....
Maybe no money for the firm, and excuse me if I'm mistaken, but this is not true.
1. NYSE specialist fees apply if the order is in the market for over 5 min. (.01/sh.)
2. My understanding there is a NYSE fee for orders between 2000-10,000 shares. How much is that again?
3. SEC fees (avg for me about .001/share)
Even a .01/sh. additional fee is a 100% increase on the commissions to the trader. Maybe no money for the firm, but shares in excess of 2500 are NOT FREE. I see this all the time in prop firm marketing, and I believe its misleading.
Don't get me wrong, I have no problem with firms doing business, and I respect what the Brights and others have accomplished and the opportunities they provide, but the REAL FACTS about daytrading is reflected in the deals that prop firms offer, just read between the lines:
They make money on commission markup. That's the deal. Not a split of profits (with clearing fees only charged to the trader), in fact, does anyone at all offer this? Assuming the firms are in it to make money (perfectly OK), they choose this model because ALL traders generate commissions and almost all NOT big profits. The firms get paid, regardless of trader profit. How well do traders really do - a secret - but I promise you most churn.
Now maybe the firms are good guys, and they want you to succeed, but if their training, etc.. really resulted in big profits, and their first concern was the trader making money, they would make more off a profit split, and set their business model accordingly, it seems to me.
My goal here is not to "bash" anybody, but I think we need some "Buyer Beware" to balance the endless prop firm hyping on this board.
Maybe no money for the firm, and excuse me if I'm mistaken, but this is not true.
1. NYSE specialist fees apply if the order is in the market for over 5 min. (.01/sh.)
2. My understanding there is a NYSE fee for orders between 2000-10,000 shares. How much is that again?
3. SEC fees (avg for me about .001/share)
Even a .01/sh. additional fee is a 100% increase on the commissions to the trader. Maybe no money for the firm, but shares in excess of 2500 are NOT FREE. I see this all the time in prop firm marketing, and I believe its misleading.
Don't get me wrong, I have no problem with firms doing business, and I respect what the Brights and others have accomplished and the opportunities they provide, but the REAL FACTS about daytrading is reflected in the deals that prop firms offer, just read between the lines:
They make money on commission markup. That's the deal. Not a split of profits (with clearing fees only charged to the trader), in fact, does anyone at all offer this? Assuming the firms are in it to make money (perfectly OK), they choose this model because ALL traders generate commissions and almost all NOT big profits. The firms get paid, regardless of trader profit. How well do traders really do - a secret - but I promise you most churn.
Now maybe the firms are good guys, and they want you to succeed, but if their training, etc.. really resulted in big profits, and their first concern was the trader making money, they would make more off a profit split, and set their business model accordingly, it seems to me.
My goal here is not to "bash" anybody, but I think we need some "Buyer Beware" to balance the endless prop firm hyping on this board.
I would hope to someday make 250k a year. is this viable in todays market? hoping, considering I gave up an entry level(anayst) ibanking job at bear stearns with base 60k and typical bonus of 20k.