I can pull it off with no problem, max upper single digit DD, scalable into over double digit MMs.
Then do it? What is the point of trading a cash account when you possess such an edge? Even RegT gives us 2X margin.
I can pull it off with no problem, max upper single digit DD, scalable into over double digit MMs.
Depends on what you are trading.1% 20 times is not 20% in a month. It is much more. Anyway OP did not specify for how long a period of time. They never do.
You can make provided you trade with high leverage and coincidently no loss occurs, which rarely happens.I saw in a social media that traders were talking about 20% profit every month. Do you think it’s really possible?
%%I saw in a social media that traders were talking about 20% profit every month. Do you think it’s really possible?

]
} Good question.Losses are inevitable, yield is based on net.You can make provided you trade with high leverage and coincidently no loss occurs, which rarely happens.
%%Depends on what you are trading.
Depends on your money management strategy.
Calculating compound return in a Spreadsheet is not the real world.


I saw in a social media that traders were talking about 20% profit every month. Do you think it’s really possible?
@SunTrader Let me warn you. I dont like rudeness.Why do you give a fack, what others may or may not be accomplishing?
I replied to someone else so fack off with your "warning".@SunTrader Let me warn you. I dont like rudeness.

Measuring returns in percentages is somewhat meaningless, instead what is far more useful is to know how many R-Multiples the trader is able to generate within each month.
If you do the math, then 20% per month is doable. Can most intraday traders, do it? Definitely not!
The formula for making good returns is:
Maximum % of profit
%%
Good points on getting more measures than just % or %%;
+ but that % or %% makes much more sense than just US $ measure which i also use.
Even more so % makes sense when going back + measure 100 years + more
.Like your orange squares say == ''manage your risk ''[expences]![]()