Quote from Trader7793:
5k is enough to begin trading at a decent prop firm. Obviously the key is to start trading small until you learn to trade!! Just because a firm gives you $200k in buying power does not mean that you should use it. Any prop firm with decent risk management should not allow you to lose too much money per day. The key here is to trade small share sizes...say 200 shares in no more than a couple of positions...until you are consistenly profitable...then increase your position sizes. A lot of new traders try to immediately make good money, prior to developing good, consistently profitable stratigies and end up losing their capital very rapidly. Your first goal should be to learn to not lose money. If you cannot consistently make money trading 200 share lots (granted it will not be much with those sizes) then why move to 1000 or 2000 share lots. If you saved 20k and went to a prop firm and traded large sizes without knowing how to trade, then you still would not have enough capital.
This is a pretty valid point. It's not so much if $5K , $10K, $25K is enough or not enough to start trading. You could start with $10M or $100M and it would still not be enough! If you don't know what you are doing..
Remember those internet funds started in the year 2000. They have several hundred million to start. And all of them went down 90-95% in 1-2yrs! So, it's not a matter of capitalization.
Sure, you gotta have ENOUGH capitalization so you wouldn't be playing with "scared money" or so little that a small adverse market move would wipe you out.
But above that, trading skills are far more valuable I think. But how does one get trading skills? By making mistakes in the market and learning from them.
Initially, you want to start SMALL. So that your mistakes will not cost so much money. If you can't make money trading a few hundred shares or 1 contract, then you ain't going to make money trading 1000 shares or 20 contracts.
And I've seen that in myself as well. I've gone to the point where even a $5K acct is adequate for me to generate some form of positive cash flow. Not great but enough. So, obviously the more capital I have access to the better the results will be.
But until the beginning trader get to that point, it's not even worth it to think about playing with large sums of money. They will not survive that either. Cuz they will lose it all.
So, even if they scrim and save for $25K to get a daytrading acct, they will still not have the trading experience. There's really only one way to get trading experience - to trade!
I would bet that if you give an expert trader a $50K account and you give a newbie a $100K account. By the end of the year, the expert trader would have more money than the newbie trader with 2x the starting capital. In fact, I would venture the newbiew would have blown-out or have his acct down by 30-50%! In fact, I would even up the stakes and say if you give the expert trader $50K and the novice $150K and the expert trader will still come out ahead.
Trading is a game of skill. Those who are more skillful win and take money from the less skillful or the unskilled.
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