I don't have one. Don't need one.
Aren't those for people who are employed by others?
Please listen to me...Fund your IRA. You can do it for both 2022 (till April 17th this year) and 2023 if you have income or are above a certain age. If you wish you can trade out of the IRA. You are limited to what you can do, because of federal laws. I personally would put it into SPY or QQQ until you have about $100,000. in a IRA account.
If you went bankrupt (just saying if), the IRA can not be touched in bankruptcy court! I worked on this strategy before I made my first million. About 1/2 my trades are in my (and my wife's) Roth IRA. I won't get into Roths...They are too confusing at this time.
BUT TRUST ME ON THIS...FUND YOUR IRA!! Talk to Schwab...They have people who can explain the benefits of opening up one.
Even on paper (sim), it is not real!! 95% of traders will move in front of you to either open or close the trade!! Twenty or more books have been written on how and why this happens.
You talk about scalping at Schwab...You are wrong! They won't even allow you to choose your exchange!!
Read, study, learn...
Two examples where you could get caught and be last in line to open or close your positions...9/11 and pandemic shutdown of the markets.
Market Reaction
Anticipating market chaos,
panic selling and a disastrous loss of value in the wake of the attacks, the NYSE and the Nasdaq remained closed until Sept. 17, the longest shutdown since the Great Depression.1 Moreover, many trading, brokerage, and other financial firms had offices in the World Trade Center and were unable to function in the immediate aftermath of the loss of life and collapse of both towers.
On the first day of NYSE trading after Sept. 11, the
Dow Jones fell 684 points, a 7.1% decline, setting a record at the time for the biggest loss in the exchange's history for one trading day. (This has since been eclipsed by the market reaction during the global coronavirus pandemic). The close of trading that Friday ended a week that saw the biggest losses in NYSE history. The Dow Jones Average was down more than 14%, the
S&P 500 Index plunged 11.6%, and the Nasdaq dropped 16%. An estimated $1.4 trillion in value was lost during this period.
Eyes wide open...