Consistently Profitable Traders - Going Red to Black

Quote from intradaybill:

Mike805,

I have no educational background, you are right. Whatever you say. But you were a bad engineer that is why you were either fired or quit and started trading. Face the truth. Trading is full of failed loser engineers and incompetent programmers that never made it in their fields. You are maybe one of them. I have worked in investments banks and trading floors. You have not even passed the door of one of them to see what real traders do. I feel sorry about you because you rush to judge people. Only people of limited intellectual capacity judge people they have never met. You are pathetic Mike805. You need to consult a psychiatrist, not even a psychologist, for believing you have the power to know over the web who is educated and who is not.

I only made an argument that trading is talent. Many I know agree. Some attacked me personally, even reached to the point to claim I am not educated. I feel sorry about you guys. You need to seek help, seriiously.

Mike805 on ignore along with the other idiots who have never traded but want to teach people how to.

Yikes... I guess I hit a nerve. Seems to be a recurring theme with you, bill.

Fortunately, I have nothing to prove here. Good luck with your path in life Bill. Hopefully, things work out for you.
 
Quote from intradaybill:

Mike805,

I have no educational background, you are right. Whatever you say. But you were a bad engineer that is why you were either fired or quit and started trading. Face the truth. Trading is full of failed loser engineers and incompetent programmers that never made it in their fields. You are maybe one of them. I have worked in investments banks and trading floors. You have not even passed the door of one of them to see what real traders do. I feel sorry about you because you rush to judge people. Only people of limited intellectual capacity judge people they have never met. You are pathetic Mike805. You need to consult a psychiatrist, not even a psychologist, for believing you have the power to know over the web who is educated and who is not.

I only made an argument that trading is talent. Many I know agree. Some attacked me personally, even reached to the point to claim I am not educated. I feel sorry about you guys. You need to seek help, seriiously.

Mike805 on ignore along with the other idiots who have never traded but want to teach people how to.

Based on what I have seen from you, I will lean towards Mike's side.
 
Quote from intradaybill:

You either have it or you do not. Face the truth guys. Do not fight reality. I am not saying you do not have it. Maybe you do. Please do not get so sensitive. Trading is a talent. No talent can be taught. Enginnering is not a talent. Architecture is a talent. You cannot become a medical doctor by forcing that on yourself. Becoming a good doctor is based on talent. If you are afraid of heights you cannot become a pilot. If you are afraid of losing money you cannot become a trader. If you do not have a good voice you cannot become a singer. What makes you think that trading is any different? It is not. You either have it or you do not. Maybe all of you have it. I am not attacking any of you. I am just asserting based on long experience that trading is a talent. I have seen hundreds of people who tried to learn it but they could not, failure after failure, and just a few became successful right from the start. they had it. It is simple. That does not mean someone should not work on their talent. But if they lack any of it, it is an excersize in futility.

I believe that trading requires only some core abilities such as the ability to recognize a few patterns and to follow rules really well. I believe that in a very short period of time I could teach a new trader to trade much better than me. If someone already had some trading experience under his/her belt, I think it might be far more difficult to teach this person.

I'm stubborn and opinionated and have trouble following my own rules consistently, and as a result I produce a fraction of the profit I'd be producing without these defects.

Also, many successful traders told me they blew a helluva lot of money in the learning process, so there's some proof that you don't have to have "it" as long as you "get it" before your account is FUBAR.
 
Quote from intradaybill:

Same holds for you. It is only your opinion.

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/talent

No, my post was supported by facts. In terms of what civil engineers do as well as architects. It's also a fact that both go to college to get a degree in their respective majors.

Your error -- was stating that a trader is either born with the ability or not -- that is false and not supported by any facts. I know many people who pursued trading; some succeeded and others failed. Not a single one of them was pursuing trading as their initial profession; all came from other fields that ranged from stock brokers to optometrists to mechanical engineers to small business owners to house wives.

What about some of those in Market Wizards, who failed early on and later achieved success? If they were born to be traders why did they fail at various times?

Traders grind away and learn every day. Traders have to adapt over time to remain profitable. Hard work is key for many, if not most, successful traders.
 
Quote from DEM BONES:

What would you say was your single most important realization or action that put you over the top to become a consistently profitable trader?

Not caring about money. Sticking to the plan and not opening the blotter until the end of the day..
 
Quote from Mike805:

I used to be an engineer. It is very much a talent. Some people have it, they can solve problems and see solutions in a matter of minutes rather than days... There are also plenty of engineers as there are plenty of traders with no talent who do just fine and make a good career out of it.

Hi Mike805, what kind of an enginner were you? Why did you decide to leave a high paying field and become a trader?
 
This is an interesting thread, I went over all posts. The thread is about consistently profitable traders. I think Bill talked about consistent profitability. He said that requires talent. I say it requires a lot of talent (and hard work to go with it) I think some of you did not even read his post carefully

Quote from intradaybill:

Trading consistently is a talent, like being a singer, a painter, an olympic athlete. It cannot be taught, like winning a 100 metter race cannot be taught if you do not have it inside you. You either have it in you or you do not. Do not fight it. Trading consistently is NOT a science. It is a gift from nature.
 
Quote from dave4532:

This is an interesting thread, I went over all posts. The thread is about consistently profitable traders. I think Bill talked about consistent profitability. He said that requires talent. I say it requires a lot of talent (and hard work to go with it) I think some of you did not even read his post carefully

Consistent profitability requires a statistical edge plus the ability to follow rules...consistently. Any technical trading book can provide you with statistical edges. If the ability to follow rules consistently is a talent that you either have or you don't, then trading requires talent. But I believe this ability can be learned, though it might take a lot longer for some (me) than others.
 
Quote from NoDoji:

Consistent profitability requires a statistical edge plus the ability to follow rules...consistently. Any technical trading book can provide you with statistical edges. If the ability to follow rules consistently is a talent that you either have or you don't, then trading requires talent. But I believe this ability can be learned, though it might take a lot longer for some (me) than others.

There is no such a thing as a statistical edge in trading. You are a dreamer. The longer term expectation from trading activity is negative. I suggest you read this book

http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~lharris/ABSTRACT/Zerosum.htm

Traders lose to long term investors and insiders. You are totally misinformed if you think there are statistical edges for you to discover and become rich.
 
Wow. How do I pay rent on my office and salaries then? I guess I have been very lucky for tens of thousands of trades for over 10 years. Lucky me, huh? And some of the people who have worked with me continue to be lucky just like I was... good thing luck can rub off on someone else too, huh?

There absolutely ARE statistical edges to exploit. They are not as big as people like to think, and it is not as easy to find or trade them as you might think... but they are there.

And that's not a "book", it's a working paper. On the other hand, that guy did write a book that is required reading for everyone I've ever hired...

Quote from dave4532:

There is no such a thing as a statistical edge in trading. You are a dreamer. The longer term expectation from trading activity is negative. I suggest you read this book

http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~lharris/ABSTRACT/Zerosum.htm

Traders lose to long term investors and insiders. You are totally misinformed if you think there are statistical edges for you to discover and become rich.
 
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