Quote from guy990opl:
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.
Limited capital? everyone has limited capital. Moronic. Trading profitably is equity invariant, once you cover your business fees. If you have a little capital your risk and stops are less in dollar terms than if you have a few million equity.
Most good trader blow out at least a few accounts on their way to trading well. It's good they had little to start with each time.
This idea that you need a certain amount of money in trading to succeed is 95% bullshit. True, you can't trade at increments that don't cover costs, but other than that it's equity invariant, meaning especiallyn stocks, you can scale down your risk to accomodate a paltry starting equity.
If you are a beginner, you might eat that initial amount a few times and you should...you should lose a few small accounts as a tuition into this biz.
If you are beginner and you start with the whole farm, count on losing it.
Once you are good, you can start with any amount and eventually make a living on it..thats the definintion of skill in this business.
To those who think they need a certain amount of money in order to trade successfully, you might take the other approach...how much money do you need in order NOT to trade.
That's a direct statement from one of the most successful traders in the history of our country. Some of you who have studied this business will know who said that.
That's one truth about trading. Again, the amount you start with is irrelevant...its just one of those myths the brokerage firms want you to believe, and losing traders cite when they are too impatient to keep going and learn for a year or two or three more.
So...starting capital is pretty much irrelevant. Just trade a market where you can afford the risk unit. and in most equities markets you can make that risk unti very very small.