Quote from NazSpaz:
With how this thread has devolved into a fight between futures vs stock guys, I fear stepping into it. Always interesting how some guys are so entrenched in one or the other and hate the guys who tout the other. Stock guys vs futures guys is worse than Repubs vs Dems, almost more of like how those English soccer fans have such hatred for other teams' fans.
So having said that, I want to try and give some insight to the original poster BASED PURELY ON MY PERSONAL EXPERIENCES, so please don't flame this, it is one man's journey.
I have tried both stocks and futures. There was a quote earlier where someone said futures are like a jungle and stocks are like finding hidden money in the corner. From my experience that is very true. I know some futures guys that do make money. The guys I know that make money do take pretty large P&L swings from time to time, swings I myself would be very uncomfortable with, but they are large traders with big accounts. I tried futures as well, I would make a bit - make a bit - make a bit - then wham, one move would rip me a new one. I made money on it overall, but not near enough as I would need and not as much as stocks make for me.
Stocks on the other hand are for me much more predictable. From my experience and connections in the business there I have seen a much higher success rate and P&Ls with stock guys than futures guys. I know there are guys killing it in futures, just saying I have seen many more guys fail trading futures than I have seen who trade stocks.
To the guy earlier that said stocks lead the futures, this is totally incorrect. All the big stock traders watch the S&P E-mini's like a hawk, and base our decisions around where it is going. In the real world there is no question that futures lead cash, not the other way around.
Which brings us to edge, if you are trading the leader (futures), you have to be a very good trader as you have to be right. If you trade the follower (stocks), you have an edge which is a few seconds of knowing which way the stocks should go before they do. You do not have to right near as often, thus the edge and higher success rate I have seen.
There are many more factors at play, but to any traders that ask me which they should trade I say stocks - albeit with one caveat: Prop.
Two of the big advantages futures offer are leverage and simpler tax accounting. If you do your daytrading retail, yes you have the PDT rule and a nightmare of accounting to deal with. If you get a Series 7 and head to a registered prop firm for stocks, you get leverage much better than futures offer (depending on your deal) and very simple accounting - one simplified P&L on a single page K1 statement at year's end.
Every now and then I don't doubt I will dabble with futures here and there just because I am a trading addict, but for the bread and butter that pays the bills I could not imagine doing anything but stocks for that.