How many years are necessary to consider yourself a successful trader?

But how many years are necessary to consider yourself a successful trader?


I think it probably has more to do with numbers of trades and variability/steadiness of results than with years?

It's going to take a swing-trader from weekly charts far longer to feel confident that s/he's a successful trader than someone trading 10 times a day from 2-minute charts (a "semi-scalper", let's say), because the evidence for that belief is clearly going to take hugely longer to achieve statistical significance?

I was advised, at the time, that I "should" consider myself a successful trader (and the frame of reference for defining the words "successful trader", at the time, was more or less "someone who can have a reasonable expectation of eventually being able to make a full-time living from it, given adequate trading capital, etc. etc.") when I was able to collate the results of a minimum of 300 consecutive trades without overall loss and without any peak-to-trough drawdowns bigger than 7.5%.

Obviously people's ideas of what constitutes a "successful trader" will vary significantly, but I certainly don't think the one above is a bad or misleading or unrealistic one, overall (and more specifically, I think it's right for the "results component" of the definition to be described in terms of drawdown-avoidance rather than in terms of profit achieved - though doubtless some people here will disagree with me about that, too).


It's not like chess. It's more like the laws of physics.


Interesting analogy, there! I think I agree. (But I'm probably biased: I was much better at physics than I am at chess!).
 
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I think it's right for the "results component" of the definition to be described in terms of drawdown-avoidance rather than in terms of profit achieved - though doubtless some people here will disagree with me about that

Nope. Ditto!
 
Anyone can have a good year. But how many years are necessary to consider yourself a successful trader?

You'll know via your family and close personal friends. You trading your own account is viewed by them just as a job...boring / stressful job.

They know its OK when they know you're paying your bills and supporting your family. :D

wrbtrader
 
People, without definitions questions like these are meaningless. Also I would like to remind you that profitable =/= successful, again, depending on the definition and one's goals.

1. Trader A makes 10K on a 5K futures account, 200% return in one year. Can he live on 10K? No. But it is an excellent return for such an account.
2. Trader B makes 10K on a 100K stock account, year after year. Can he live on 10K? No. But it is a pretty respectable return for growing capital specially if made in consecutive years.
3. Trader C makes 5% on a 1 mill account and lives off of it. He doesn't have to work other job. (let's say he lives in Vietnam)

So would the OP consider these traders successful? I guess beside a definition it also depends on one's goals. If the goals were achieved one can consider himself successful.
 
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Anyone can have a good year. But how many years are necessary to consider yourself a successful trader?

Depends. You could have had a string of good, consistent profitable years during this raging market. (Note the expression, "confusing brains with a bull market".) You won't know where you stand as a trader until you experience a big smashola and come out of it relatively unscathed.

Over your trading career, the market is going to "take a run at you"... the kind that could leave you bankrupt and in tears.... perhaps a half-dozen times. It only needs to nail you once or twice to ruin everything. Until you have dealt with that, you don't really know where you stand.

Stated another way... "One bad year, Hell... even one string of bad short-term decisions, could wipe out 20 years of success".

You haven't "won" the game of trading until you quit and are holding the market's money. It's like poker. You've only won when the game breaks up and you're the one with the chips.
 
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More than how many years, it's

When you can identify the reasons for your losses.
When you don't look at the prices on the menu.
When you have more followers on ET than the number you follow.
When you feel you don't have to trade today.
When you no longer feel the market is rigged.
When you are happy to find manipulated stocks.
When you stop worrying about what they are doing.
When you have no need to hedge.
When you no longer dream of making it.
When love is the only emotion you can't control.
When you stop giving tips to your friends.
When, with the exception of a stop loss, you don't need risk management.
When you stop trying to copy what the banks and hedge funds are doing
When you stop trying to be like those you read about in Market Wizards.
When you don't give a rat's ass about the small loss you just took.
When you no longer fear or blame HFT, AI, algos and the like.
When the obvious is obvious.
When you no longer creep up to your computer.
When you've read 100 market books and feel you could write the best one ever.
When there are only a few on ET that you pay attention to.
When you don't get the urge to trade Bitcoin.
When you realize that there is still a lot left to learn.
When you stop looking for the best trading platform.
When you are really proud of your plan.
And last but not least,
When you have the time to write stuff like this on ET!!

(to be continued)

As someone who has had glimpses of "it" but is still not "there" yet, everything said here intuitively feels like the truth.
 
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