Originally posted by stockerup
Kastro_316,
One of the key factors in how much you make is how much you can risk. Example:
Seanote (who I think most here on ET would consider a highly skilled trader) traded, according to my calculations, $621,845.00 worth of stock today. His total earnings was $7,165.00-- all winners, one flat, no losers, an exceptional day for anybody. That works out to be a 1% return on the money he put at risk.
Size is the key. If you're under capitalized you'll just be treading water at best.
I see where you get that 621,845 USD from but I wonder, is this the usual way to calculate the % return?
Originally posted by Seanote
TODAYS EXECUTIONS:
15:16:27 CYMI BOT 2000 35.90
14:05:46 CYMI SHRT 2000 36.30
12:47:33 CYMI BOT 2000 35.73
12:17:54 CYMI SHRT 2000 36.17
12:07:28 QCOM SLD 3000 28.90
12:03:43 QCOM BOT 3000 28.70
11:53:13 QCOM SLD 3000 29.09
11:41:11 QCOM BOT 3000 28.85
11:15:35 CYMI BOT 2000 35.25
10:49:16 CYMI SHRT 1000 35.96
10:49:09 CYMI SHRT 1000 35.90
10:32:41 CYMI BOT 1500 35.00
10:27:17 CYMI SHRT 1500 35.47
10:21:17 KLAC BOT 2000 47.37
10:15:59 KLAC SHRT 2000 47.37
09:48:37 QCOM SLD 3000 28.85
09:15:20 QCOM BOT 3000 28.15
OPEN POSITIONS:
NONE
CLOSED P&L: $7,165 OPEN P&L: $0
MTD: $34,396 YTD: $237,670
Now you could also say that the largest amount of money he had invested in the market at a given time was 94,740 USD (KLAC trade: 2000x47.37).
If you look at it this way he made a $7,165 return on what could be as little as a $94,740 trade account. That's a return of 7.6%.
And suppose he used max margin (25k account x 4 > 94 k)
that would be a return of 30% in one day with as little as 25K.
But I guess you shouldn't calculate those percentages like this, right?
Still impressive tough
