Not true even in 10k account.
Let us analyze this model portfolio case.
Subscription fee assuming you subscribe to only one service = $1250
Average trades per month according to his website:
View attachment 179462
So about 172 (14.3*12) round trips or about 344 single transactions per year.
They use different spreads.
View attachment 179463
Straddles 2 leg, IC 4 leg, Calendar 2 and Bfly 3 legs. Average assume 2.5 legs per trade.
So it is about 860 (344*2.5) legs per year.
Website says they 4-5 open spreads. So average 5 open spreads.
View attachment 179464
In $10,000 account, 5 spreads mean around $2000 per spread. Conservative estimate looks like probably 2 contracts per trade.
So yearly contracts traded 860 * 2 = 1720 contracts traded per year.
Assuming $1 contract commission fee = $1,720 per year.
Just from subscription and commission, client is spending $2970 ($1,720 + $1,250) per year. That is 30% cost or hurdle rate one has to overcome.
I did not even include slippage.
You stated 10% slippage per trade. There are about 344 transactions per year. So slippage cost is 344*10% = 34.4%.
So total cost 34.4%+29.7% = 64.1% expenses.
That 82% CAGR is a mirage.
Your calculation is WAY off.
1) Most members pay less than $1/contract commissions.
2) Most members get way less than 10% slippage.
3) Many members take some of the unofficial trades, and also make higher returns on some of our trades (like QCOM example).
4) Most members have larger accounts than 10k.
But even with your completely unrealistic calculation, it is 17%/year after all expenses. Still beats 99% of fund managers.
