Hi all. I'm new to the board. This is my first post.
I've been in IT for 25 years. I may be ready for a change. What are the odds of an old dog like me (46) actually making a living as an active trader? I know there are tons of variables and this is a borderline stupid question, but let me provide a bit more info about myself...
I have a good intellect - not in MENSA mind you - but I do ok. I've always found that I picked things up faster than those around me most of the time. I'm a naturally analytical person and have no problem immersing myself in something complex. I also have a decent amount of savings that I could use to get started with. From a work ethic perspective I will put in the work as long as it's taking me somewhere. Are there any others out there like me? If I couldn't make at least $150K/yr I probably would not be interested. I'd love to hear stories from those who may have tried this and how it worked out. Thanks in advance.
I'm in a very similar boat as you though younger than you. More recently, I've been working in analytics(data science, modeling, analytics) rather than IT. But in broad terms technology.
I've posted a similar threads here(search for "Need Advice"). Before I was in technology I was in the investment management quant space(long term + short term firms).
So I might have some perspective to potentially offer you given how similar our situations are.
When you are trading well, then trading is the best job in the work. You placed your trades and boom money comes in. It's like magic. One good days you'll make more than you make in a month in most jobs! But it's NOT how much you make but how much you lose that matters. Without proper risk management, you'll lose all your gains. From personal experience.
When you are not doing well(yes, there will be periods of low to negative performance), then it's possibly the worst job in the world(depending how you feel about it). You are giving up a stable high paying job with great benefits, bonuses, 401Ks, etc. in a growth industry(tech) for an opportunity to lose money. Doh!
If it's that easy to make money then everyone will be rich trading. Even Wall St "can't really trade." They make their money from being the middle men and fees. Read about all the hotshot ex-Wall Streeters who gave up their cushy Wall St jobs as middlemen and open up hedge funds. Most of them failed miserably. A very few succeed.
There are several paths.
Path #1:
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You can work on Wall St and learn about the industry with low to no risk. Get a job at a hedge fund, i-banks, etc. At the beginning of my career, I worked a several investment management firms and hedge funds before switching to tech. There's literal no stress and risk. It's OPM. They collect a percentage of billions AUM. As long as they don't trail the index too much, they could care less. It's intellectually interesting work too.
For hedge funds, on the other hand, there is more stress since it's performance based. My ex-boss and founder of the hf previously worked at a Bulge Bracket i-bank. Then he started his own hf. I think he did OK some years. But toward the end of the fund, he just sold the technology(fast engine) that his tech team developed and cashed out. That's how hard the game is. The big players like Rentech, DE Shaw, Two Sigmas, etc. have multiple billions under mgmt. And they have dozens of good edges and continue to research new ones by hiring the best quant minds to do research.
I'm not saying you need to do that to be successful. But it seems like it's not as easy as people think.
But it's NOT impossible.
Path #2:
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Continue your tech job and trade on the side. Trade in the mornings if you are in PST(like me) before work. Or develop trading systems that will trade for you while you work. I need to start develop that. This is the path I have arrived at as the best path for me going forward. I've starting a small analytics consulting thing. It pays the bills. Hopefully one day it will scale. In the meantime, I learn trading on the side despite the chorus of people on here saying the only way forward is full-time.
You are 46 older than me and most guys/girls on here. Think of your life situation and the road ahead and decide what's best.
good luck!