Quote from thesniper:
However if you have skills in asset management, investing, hedging, trading a portfolio of macro trends with fundamental support then people will beg you manage money for them or trade for them. There is a tremendous demand for money managers that can produce high returns at low volatility. These are the highly scalable skills I'm focused on developing.
Quote from Pigsky:
This is interesting thread.... as said above, how can he as a losing daytrader have skills to become portfolio mgr????
let's review....
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=102684
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=220513
so....
2005: lose money
2006: lose money
2007: ??
2008: ??
2009: +75k
2010: +15k
2011: lose money
2012: ??
2013: lose money I assume
unless 07/08 had huge gains, net result of this is most likely negative number
please quit daytrading, delete trading platform from your computer and throw away your Al Brooks books where they belong.... you know the right thing to do is get out of this trading busness...
any job even low wage is better for you.... work low wage job while going to school or training for better career.
Quote from eurojack:
Are you seriously asking this? You know what failed traders do, don't you? They teach other people how to trade. You've got 10 years of experience and you're looking for a job? GTFO, just start a course/website and start offering seminars/lectures in your area and go from there.
Quote from Australianjoe:
I hope you get some good advice.
I read on trade2win about a guy who has been trying to trade for over 20 years and is still around break-even, so don't feel too bad!
The whole thing(daytrading) is likely a pipe-dream.
The idea that we can sit around in our boxer shorts and look at pretty charts and expect them to give us enough information to make informed trading decisions certainly seems to get a smile from professionals in other fields!
Sometimes we fool ourselves that we know what we are doing, but in actual fact, we are just experiencing a very lucky spell.
And sometimes the people that try to give us hope are vendors/'trading coaches' in disguise or bullshitters!
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I've read good things about the 'what color is your parachute' book that someone else reccommended, althougth that might all be a bit long terms for you and I imagine you just want to jump into a course or a job straight away and get earning money?
I wouldn't reccommend it, but the becomming a trading vendor isn't actually the worst idea in the world, either!
Every vendor out there is a scam artist. If you were really a profitable trader, you wouldn't be messing about selling courses for $90 or charging for tips etc.
But the public are generally blinded by the dollar signs in their own eyes, so you may aswell join the vendors and make some risk free money.
It would be good if you could get a list of courses that coud be completed within say 6 months, that could potentially lead you to a well paid job.
They're out there, i'm sure.
One example is an Austalian friend of mine. Was unemplyed for a few years. Generally depressed and borderline suicidal. Completely broke. He enrolled onto a tree surgery course which took about 6 months, and within a few days of passing he was earning well over $1000 per week and is now earning about 3 times that amount as the owner of his own tree surgery business.
Quote from Grandluxe:
Here's one for you.
Scrap metal business.
Honestly, if you are entrepreneurial, I think it is better to start a bona fide actual business than get involved with the trading "business".
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...riving-scrap-metal-trade-makes-10bn-year.html
The scrap metal millionaires: How old vacuum cleaners, cables and cars have made one man and his small army of scrappers a fortune
Sydenham Scrap Metal yard in south London turns over £7million a year. Boss Michael, 31, says: 'I've no exams but I run a multi-million business'
Quote from Bob111:
i'm in same exact shoes as OP. except i'm a bit older and have a bit more money from trading. i've looked into a real estate as a possible source of income and i'm pretty damn handy and can fix practically anything inside a house(plumbing,etc included,except electrical stuff)
but i can't find any property in our area where return will be >5% after all expenses(and that's assuming 100% occupancy rate)
it's sounds easy-hey! just buy, rent and collect the income,but reality is a bit different these days
Quote from kut2k2:
+1
His story does reek of high implausibility.
http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&postid=3928871#post3928871