Is Trading Itself a Bad Trade? I Analyzed the Industry- Prove Me Wrong

Day trading is hard and many traders do fail at it because:

They are lazy entitled babies who think there is a shortcut to mastering a skill.

They are trying to day trade from their other job's office and get completely distracted. If I have other business going on I shut the screens off as I know you cannot trade distracted. Very few dedicate all day to the craft, they think they can do it part time with little respect and make money. They are fucktarded.

Many have no actual skill in analyzing charts and rely on indicators as a magic tool to tell them when to buy and sell and get chopped to shit.

They have no discipline to sit there day in and day out and focus. They blame the market for their lack of discipline.

Extremely poor money management skills and end up blowing out their piker account.

They research and pay for other people's systems instead of developing their own.

They trade the wrong instrument for their skill, knowledge and risk tolerance.

If they fail a few times they try to validate their failure by claiming it cannot be done and bitch and moan rather than work harder.

If it were easy everyone would be doing it. Most fail because of reasons above and they never correct their mistakes. Failure breeds failure.

Studies on day trading are bullshit that can be detroyed by anyone with even Statistics 101 course/background.

If you rely on a study of day trading to make a claim, you are proving to the rest of us why you fail because you fall under many of the categories above.
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What a waste of time. What a fatuous stupid bullshit fed waste of time. Name calling, dick thwacking pointless crap. I butted out having been much amused and am amazed to find the children still in the playground long after bedtime. Ha ha ha.
Well at least you got a good laugh...low risk...high reward...high probabilty...THE PERFECT TRADE!
 
Listen up nothing truer was ever said on ET! The retail traders potatoe chip money is not of great interest to the big players. The institutions are interested only in taking each others money...a retail trader just has to develop the skill to determine which side is winning for the moment and join that side..i.e. who is winning...the bears or the bulls..So......dispense with “they went after my stoploss” nonsense. Front running does happen in HTF micro TF’s but most retail traders trade way out of those TF’s.

The retail trader just needs to trade with the big money. They are the market and moves the stocks with their huge volume. Like a smelt swimming with the sharks. If you stay in front of the shark where it can see you, it will swallow you in one gulp! Stay on its side and you are safe and sound! Stick with the trend. Far easier than trying to reinvent the wheel!
 
The retail trader just needs to trade with the big money. They are the market and moves the stocks with their huge volume. Like a smelt swimming with the sharks. If you stay in front of the shark where it can see you, it will swallow you in one gulp! Stay on its side and you are safe and sound! Stick with the trend. Far easier than trying to reinvent the wheel!
Well maybe that is what cityboy is saying..if you are going to trade do it this way? I think mickey would agree with him if that is what he is saying.....
 
I thought you were against trading...LOL
I am 100 percent convinced that a trader's skills and mindset can be applied to life, to business ventures and so on. Unfortunately, I have seen little of it here. The premise is...a a true 'trader' would not day trade retail in the conventional sense (I refer you to the title) but exploit other trades.

Here are examples.

1 You get married - before the 'trade' you set a stop-loss and put your assets into a trust as well as sign a pre-nup. Risk management.
2. You establish a business - you thoroughly research the market, you pilot test the venture and you invest in the most reliable business structure - you manager you reduce risk but use a limited liability structure if it goes wrong.
3. You are bombarded by BS, spin, sales pitches and magic fairy dust- you do your due diligence, check the numbers, check the balance sheets of companies and decide not to proceed with an investment. You discover it will be profitable, but other opportunities have a better risk/reward so you discard it.
4. Your wife/husband has an affair - you 'cut your trade' ruthlessly and with no emotion. You move onto the next one...ideally several.

The above being applications of a 'trader's mindset'
 
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My personal note is: these 3% are all billionaires. So you see, you are wrong. LOL.
Where do you get the information to proof that many don't make money over the long term? Do they all send you every year their audited trackrecord? If not you are just telling nonsense as you have no information at all.



Where is the evidence? I marked in red all the hypothetical assumptions, which are no proof at all but just assumptions.

A lot of some and may. How many is some? 0.1% or 99%?
May, but also may not.
There is no proof at all.
Guys, open the link and read the research. Have some intellectual honesty.

This is a peer reviewed study from a top university over a long-time frame. I simply replicated parts of it as the report would be too long. Facts don't care about your feelings.

There have been numerous studies which have confirmed this.

On an personal anecdotal note...I worked for some time in retail broking and I can flat out tell you that the overwhelming majority of clients lost money in the long-run. Statistically, some will always make money in the short term, but if they play/trade long enough, they lose. Those that did make money were 'gamed' to lose eg misquotes or delayed orders. This was confirmed by another poster here who worked as a broker and had a similar experience.

I refer you to my video from the Wolf of Wall Street as to the mechanism on a previous post. The key thing is to convince them that they can win. Here are common examples:

1. It is all your fault. You did not work hard enough.
2. You need more experience/training, perhaps decades.
3. You did not understand the latesy Rainbow Ichimoku Reverse Formation - technical analysis (I made up RIRF by the way)
4. More software or research reports

That way, they return to play again.

In the movie The Usual Suspects one of the characters says that the biggest trick the devil played was making the world believe he did not exist. The best trick that you can play on retail clients is making them believe that they have hope and that they can actually win in the long-run. It is more profitable as client acquisition costs go down and profits go up.
 
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