>porkchop_001
I've only skimmed through the posts here so I might be
missing the points, but from I see you've read just one
book and now want to daytrade futures.
The book you read will surely cause you to envy the
success of those traders. However, IMO it's not what
you need at this stage. If you are to be successful in
trading, you must first have the basic knowledge of how
to analyse markets, stocks, futures etc, and also have
a trading plan that works based on your analysis. You
won't develop those skills chewing the fat with guys
on the street or on message boards. It takes years of
study. I've been trading for 35 years, and just yesterday
I discovered something new.
My best advice is to read books that teach you how to
analyse, as that is what you will eventually have to do.
You should plan on reading 50 to 100 books. In them, find the
type of analysis that you can handle. Master it. Develop a
trading plan and test it on paper hundreds of times. If you can
at least break even, start trading the minimum lots in an
ETF. Then move slowly into stocks. If you make it that far,
you might then be able to start trading futures 3 or 4
years from now.
Sounds like work, doesn't it?
I've only skimmed through the posts here so I might be
missing the points, but from I see you've read just one
book and now want to daytrade futures.
The book you read will surely cause you to envy the
success of those traders. However, IMO it's not what
you need at this stage. If you are to be successful in
trading, you must first have the basic knowledge of how
to analyse markets, stocks, futures etc, and also have
a trading plan that works based on your analysis. You
won't develop those skills chewing the fat with guys
on the street or on message boards. It takes years of
study. I've been trading for 35 years, and just yesterday
I discovered something new.
My best advice is to read books that teach you how to
analyse, as that is what you will eventually have to do.
You should plan on reading 50 to 100 books. In them, find the
type of analysis that you can handle. Master it. Develop a
trading plan and test it on paper hundreds of times. If you can
at least break even, start trading the minimum lots in an
ETF. Then move slowly into stocks. If you make it that far,
you might then be able to start trading futures 3 or 4
years from now.
Sounds like work, doesn't it?