In reviewing collective2.com, it seems an interesting idea, but quite a different business model from RAPA's. People who create systems on collective2.com are looking to get paid subscriber fees. Presumably, a system has to have a positive expectancy to gain subscribers, but it looks to me like the earnings mentioned are from subscriber fees rather than from trading profits. Subscribers are either buying "signals" or having a broker trade an account based on signals from collective2. What strike me as issues not well covered include market selection and intricacies of order execution. There is more to trading well than signals. I suspect many of the subscribers are losing money even while the system appears profitable.
Someone mentioned the Top Step Trading 'combine' a few pages back. My impression of the combine is that it is geared toward daytrading. That is fine for people with an interest in daytrading, but it is certainly not representative of the trading business as a whole.
That leaves me wondering how easy is it for investors to find profitable money managers? In reading a couple other threads in ET, I found opinions at both extremes. I have the impression that managers who can return 20%/year with reasonable consistency and asset size are quite rare.
Someone mentioned the Top Step Trading 'combine' a few pages back. My impression of the combine is that it is geared toward daytrading. That is fine for people with an interest in daytrading, but it is certainly not representative of the trading business as a whole.
That leaves me wondering how easy is it for investors to find profitable money managers? In reading a couple other threads in ET, I found opinions at both extremes. I have the impression that managers who can return 20%/year with reasonable consistency and asset size are quite rare.