Quote from PhiSigmaIota:
It is nice to see some sarcastic grammer teachers in this community. English is my second language and I do have scarce time to write literary masterpieces when I am trading. I do believe my message is succinct.
You should be very clairvoyant as you assessed my academic and professional credentials from my quick message.
I still do appreciate to get more feedback from sincere ET members. THX
That is exactly what I am debating. Being a prop has many advantages.Quote from Don Bright:
If you planning on making money, it doesn't make much sense to both give away 80% plus another 50% for just $10mil. If you don't think you have a solid edge, then maybe.
I know I'm biased, but our guys can use $millions and keep 100% of their profits, it's up to them to develop their edge (with our help, of course).
Now, if it was $150 million or something, go for it, LOL.
Don
Most important point to consider. At the onset a hedgefund has a much lower payback than staying on your own (unless someone does give you $100m+ at the start). But, the longer you show consistent performance, the more funds you should be able to raise, and eventually you'll get to a point where the return finally beats what you could get from staying independent. But, the crucial thing is how scalable are your strategies and what your anticipated annual ROC would be. I'd easily take a strategy that returned 30% annually but was scalable to $5 billion over a strategy that returned 100% but only scaled to $5 million.Quote from showyouwang:
I'd probably jump on this offer if I knew my strategies were scalable. There's a lot of flexibility with having that much capital.
Quote from HotTip:
Most important point to consider. At the onset a hedgefund has a much lower payback than staying on your own (unless someone does give you $100m+ at the start). But, the longer you show consistent performance, the more funds you should be able to raise, and eventually you'll get to a point where the return finally beats what you could get from staying independent. But, the crucial thing is how scalable are your strategies and what your anticipated annual ROC would be. I'd easily take a strategy that returned 30% annually but was scalable to $5 billion over a strategy that returned 100% but only scaled to $5 million.
Quote from Midas:
Is it possible to do both, in other words trade a prop. account for income while you build the hedge fund?
It might be worth looking into.

Quote from PhiSigmaIota:
That is exactly what I am debating. Being a prop has many advantages.
The goal or the fund here is start with 10 mil., perform well in the first year and raise more funds and grow it to $150 mil with funds of funds money in 3-4 years.