Originally posted by Don Bright
The "95%" is accurate only for retail traders (as far as the previous reports were concerned). Professional traders are somewhat better.
Don
After doing a bit of research on those "Professional" firms advertised here, I find it really funny that remote, do-it-yourself traders are known as "retail", while those hired onto a prop house qualify as "Professional". From what I've seen and read, those "professional" traders sound more like "retail pit traders" -- ie, remote floor traders, with hardly any of the benefits a real seat on the NYSE or CME offers. If some can succeed at that game and are able to feed their broker's families at the same time, kudos to them. But "professional commissions generator" seems a more suitable moniker, don't you think? And strange that the professional crowd doesnt touch the Nasdaq, when it's the closest thing one can get to being a floor trader trading over a computer. If the "professionals" can't handle the Nasdaq these days, then by golly who can??
My bit of advice for those wondering is this: don't fall for that magic "professional" label, even if mom and dad keep bugging you to quit gambling in stocks and get a "real" job; the only real job you will eventually be able to secure at these advertised prop houses is recruiting other newcomers and getting a cut off the house rake. If you want to learn how to trade, find a successful independent trader who is willing to show you the ropes (if you don't know where to start, subscribe to RealMoney.com and go through the entire Todd Harrison archives). Needing someone else to tell you that you are a professional results from the same lack of conviction as needing someone else's opinion on what to do with your last trade. IMO, someone becomes a professional once he or she stops wondering whether they qualify or not.
