Quote from gnom:
Was reading old p/l threads and numbers that lescor, Red Ink, Dustin, etc. posted daily on ET. What do they all have in common? They trade hundreds of thousands shares per day. Is this really necessary?
Decide how much money you want to make per day. Say $200. That's like $50k per year. Better than an entry level office job.
Your number of shares are based on how much profit you're going to hold each one for.
If you buy 100k shares and sell them for a 1 cent profit, that's $1,000.
So that's probably way too much.
If you buy 10,000 shares and sell them for a 2 cent profit, that's $200.
Or you can buy 1,000 shares and sell them for 20 cent profit, that's $200.
Or you can buy 500 shares and sell them for 40 cent profit, that's $200.
So what you need to do is figure out with your system about how many cents you're making per share, and adjust your position size accordingly.
Remember that a 20 cent move may be a lot for a $20 stock, but not for a $500 stock, so that's going to affect your decisions as well.
You might want to pay attention to daily % increase of the stock rather than cents.
Does anybody here on ET make $2K-$3K per day and trade less than 100K shares?
I make about $400-$800 per day on average trading up to 9 ES contracts. You can view my journal in the "Journals" sub forum.