Day Trading is a pipedream.

Quote from guy990opl:

...I don't day trade because it's not for me and I couldn't do it...
Your words. Perhaps this would have been a more accurate title for your thread.
 
You plagiarized this from:
http://www.ross-trading.com/misc/bestbiz.htm
Quote from FattBurger:

Trading Futures is a business. To my mind, it is the best business in the world - for a great many reasons! It has a very high profit potential against a very low overhead. Risk can be tremendously reduced by taking only high probability trades. In fact, futures trading is a relatively low-risk business when approached with the right attitude and the right planning.
There are no employee problems other than myself. No unions to contend with, no negotiations, no strikes. No employee benefit plans other than what I give to myself. No employees stealing from me. No collective bargaining, and no stockholders.
There are no merchandising costs, no damaged goods, no vandalism, no service calls, no repairs to make, and no guarantees to honor.
“I don’t have to advertise, and I have no marketing headaches. There is almost always a buyer if I want to sell, and almost always a seller if I want to buy. No purchasing and procurement problems, and no salesmen making mistakes.
“There are no manufacturing problems, no production schedules to meet, no shipping, no receiving, no product liability, and no insurance policies to carry.
“I don’t have storage problems either. No warehouse, no spoilage, no items to discontinue or mark down. No bills of lading, no freight or freight damage, no trucks to load or to unload.
“I’m free of invoicing, accounts payable, payroll, inventories, accounts receivable, billing, dunning, bad checks, and bad debts.
“Now I ask myself, “Self, where else can you find a business like this?” The answer is an overwhelming “Nowhere”! It’s the most perfect business in the world!!”
 
To Cheese,


Having limited capital certainly does not help the individual day trader after all he is going to be against pros with a lot of capital.

If the individual day trader has $1 and the pro got $5 and the bet is for 25 cents it takes only 4 bets/trades for the individual trader to blow up, but it takes 20 for the pro.


Who is showing ignorance, is probability something one should be aware of or it is no big deal ?


AND...most Day Traders tend to ignore the word: CONSISTENCY.

If one starts day trading and one gets a lucky week/month does that make him a good day trader ? After all his profitability was positive per DAY.

In addition to all of the above don't forget how it is much harder for day traders when it comes to psycology.

You and most people assume that I say what I said because I am a failed trader, no no no, I am a failed DAY trader, as a matter of fact I didn't even try to day trade. BUT...I have been trading full time for 5 years and AGAIN in 5 years I NEVER met a succesful day trader.

If you meet them and they are all around maybe I live in the wrong city.


Quote from Cheese:

No offence to the thread opener, but he has demonstrated ignorance as to what goes on in markets. One of the ways trading markets is looked at in big institutions, is profitability PER DAY. For the individual trader with limited capital the most efficient means to exploit markets is daytrading. [...]
:)
 
Quote from austinp:

speaking of "there must be a reason"...

what motivates you or any failed (aka quitter) trader to invest precious time (on a Saturday, no less) telling complete strangers on an anonymous message board that the topic of interest to them is impossible.

In other words, what do you personally get for stating that trading is impossible on a trading forum? What's the emotional payoff for you? You cannot trade, no big deal. Lots of others can't cut it, either. But what do you personally get out of being here any more at all?
teh win
 
Here's a picture of the Marex trading floor (formerly Refoc Trading Services) the largest futures prop firm in London, but one of many.

To get into Marex you have to have a track record of consistent profitably. There are about 200ish traders in the picture alone, they also have a few smaller offices off the main floor and some remote traders.

I'm sure that day trading for all these guys is a pipe dream..... (Sarcasm)
 

Attachments

What year was that photo taken? Marex is an excellent Company in expanding Markets, but really, is joe blow trading going to get access to Markit, or get access to LME metal futures??

It would be like comparing a bunch of Tour De France riders to the local guy riding around the park with fenders on... that guy doesn't have a chance without an environment where he can become that good. For 99% of the people, in this electronic trading environment, daytrading is of course a fallacy.

It seems to me the thread starter means people who try to trade from home, whom will encounter capital issues, latency issues, scalability and reliability issues with their hardware, not to mention the dynamisms of their personal lives.

For that, hes on the money.
 
Quote from Fireplace:

Do you 'moonlight' as user Crgarcia?

no, but the concept, "I am set for a while, and want to put my money to work for me trading futures" is ludicrous.

trading is not a simple, but a multiyear, expensive, timeconsuming pursuit that has a small chance of success.

No highly successful, experienced trader (note: not PAPER trader) would disagree much.
 
English is not my first language, but I am glad that at least one person understood my thread.


Quote from psytrade:

What year was that photo taken? Marex is an excellent Company in expanding Markets, but really, is joe blow trading going to get access to Markit, or get access to LME metal futures??

It would be like comparing a bunch of Tour De France riders to the local guy riding around the park with fenders on... that guy doesn't have a chance without an environment where he can become that good. For 99% of the people, in this electronic trading environment, daytrading is of course a fallacy.

It seems to me the thread starter means people who try to trade from home, whom will encounter capital issues, latency issues, scalability and reliability issues with their hardware, not to mention the dynamisms of their personal lives.

For that, hes on the money.
 
Quote from psytrade:

* * *

It seems to me the thread starter means people who try to trade from home, whom will encounter [1]capital issues, [2]latency issues, [3]scalability and [4]reliability issues with their hardware, not to mention the [5]dynamisms of their personal lives.

For that, hes on the money.

[1] lack of capital is overblown. A person starting out with a big account usually just means he will lose more money than someone who starts with a small one. Both lack knowledge, skill, and experience to extract successfully.

[2] latency is not an issue nowadays. The exception for me is when I trade from overseas and from time to time there is packet loss.

[3] scalability: non-issue for the small trader.

[4] reliability of hardware: non-issue. I would also include software in this. Lots of serviceable ones available and at much lower cost compared to years ago.

[5] personal life: this is not particular to small traders; doesn't matter whether "professional" or "amateur"; this can always be an issue.

I would add another category: execution costs, i.e., commissions and fees. That's a non-issue compared to years ago. Much lower costs nowadays to trade, and getting lower.

You're gonna have to look to something else besides these categories for the reason why so many crash and burn at daytrading.
 
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