Is Trading Right for Me or Should I Stick with Poker?

ohh Ferguson was the Bright poker guy that blew up?
I remember reading about that but didn't know who he was at the time.
Thats another huge difference between poker and trading. You can watch the best poker guys in the world "trade" and how they play.
We basically have no idea exactly what the best guys in the world do at trading. Jim Simmons isn't going to do a TV show and show you how he plays his game, not to mention even if he did you couldn't play that way anyway.
 
Quote from days:

You definately should go to trading. $275K-$325K a year from poke make you a very top poker player. A very top trader can make $20-$30M a year. For the best in the industry, even $200M - $300M a year.

Because when you are good trader, you have leverage, you play with other peoples money (in Billions). Can you do this as a poker player ?

Yeah, and last you heard how many of the "top" poker players have gone out and started their own hedge funds and parlayed their millions into more millions? :)

You can say that a good poker player will have a few big advantages over anyone other newbie trader, that being a likely larger starting bankroll and less intimidation from a swinging p/l. But how they built that bankroll to begin with was a willingness to gamble, to put their money on the line for a slim mathematical advantage. On any given hand, it's 99% luck, 1% skill, right?

That just doesn't translate into the markets, especially for an individual trader using his own funds. Odds etched in stone don't exist except in retrospect, the reflexivity that is a fundamental structure of the markets just doesn't carry the same weight in a standard deck of cards.

Anyways, can't you just imagine how some of the great players would handle getting stuck in a bad trade on the spoos? Who wouldn't double down in a friggin heartbeat lol? These guys are just numb, for better or for worse. But black swans don't exist in poker, at least not when it comes to the magnitude of your potential losses.
 
Quote from illiquid:

You can say that a good poker player will have a few big advantages over anyone other newbie trader, that being a likely larger starting bankroll and less intimidation from a swinging p/l. But how they built that bankroll to begin with was a willingness to gamble, to put their money on the line for a slim mathematical advantage. On any given hand, it's 99% luck, 1% skill, right?

On any hand, this is true (99% luck,1% skill). But over 100K hands, it's like 99% skill and 1% luck. This is the minimum point that people will look at to help determine their winrate, but even this sample can be deceptive. This year I had a 100K sample that was breakeven, and another 100K where I made 50K. This is an extreme example of variance.
 
Quote from Joab:

You make a very good point.

I would prefer to be a high stakes poker player right now rather than a trader but after 25 years in this business I can't because I have grown accustom to the money. :(

This is something I would be afraid of and know it's def realistic. If I just played poker, I would have a good amount of time to try other things, but trading would be difficult to do since most people believe trading isn't a part time job. I could trade and play 9 tables at once (I got a real sick computer setup), but this setup wouldn't be very conducive to learning from my mistakes.

I don't like sitting around and watching tv, etc, so I'd have to find something else to work on. I play alot of sports so I could join intermurals leagues in Chicago. I would need another project. Maybe I'd just start playing piano again or something like that.

Another point I want to make is the jobs that I applied for. I used ETers list of top firms in addition to wallstreetoasis.com lists and have gotten a few offers from them. I'm gonna post those lists just to show I've only applied to good firms. From all my research, it seems these are the best firms. I also got an offer from a good hedge fund and considering that, too.

http://www.elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=118520&highlight=prop+firms

I applied to the top and 2nd tier with 3 offers.

http://www.wallstreetoasis.com/forums/best-proprietary-trading-firms
 
Quote from The Tripster:

On any hand, this is true (99% luck,1% skill). But over 100K hands, it's like 99% skill and 1% luck. This is the minimum point that people will look at to help determine their winrate, but even this sample can be deceptive. This year I had a 100K sample that was breakeven, and another 100K where I made 50K. This is an extreme example of variance.

Yes, in poker, that 99:1 will eventually turn itself all the way around in the long run. But all I can say in regards to individual trading is that such a thing just doesn't exist. Because in the end the entire market, the entire game, will change, and you can throw all your stats out the window. What if they took out all the fives and tens in the deck (and they didn't tell you about it either)? How will you compare how you play now with how you played before? And when would you realize where that before/after point was? Maybe exactly at the moment they decide to put all the 5's and 10's back in?

I don't know how others feel about this, but for me it was either you know what's going on or you don't -- there is no inbetween for long. But even if you trade as if you know, you always need to prepare/expect for what you don't. Variance basically goes out the window. Although both poker and trading share alot when it comes to uncertainty and imperfect information, beneath it all one is random/controlled, the other is anti-random disguised as random.

edit: sorry if the above isn't very clear, but I just don't see much translation between poker and trading except for the glaring fact that having made alot of money in one will definitely help you on your way to getting started in the other. In fact the superficial similarities between the two may actually be a detriment when it comes down to actual learning? Who knows, I have no idea what it's like to play at high stakes games where the "cards don't matter", so fwiw.
 
Quote from jdeezero05:

ohh Ferguson was the Bright poker guy that blew up?
I remember reading about that but didn't know who he was at the time.
.
Did the article mention Ferguson by name? -- or-- Did the article mention an unnamed Bright poker guy and you're assuming it was Ferguson? I'm really curious. A link would be great.
 
I will say that I had a lot of success with poker. Played it all through college with a couple friends and made a good amount of money for me at the time.

It was 1000000x easier than trading. But the rewards of trading are leagues above what you can accomplish in poker not to mention that mentally it forces you to go to another level. I have no regrets that I didnt stick with poker. But I gave up a LOT to become a profitable trader.
 
Quote from illiquid:


edit: sorry if the above isn't very clear, but I just don't see much translation between poker and trading except for the glaring fact that having made alot of money in one will definitely help you on your way to getting started in the other. In fact the superficial similarities between the two may actually be a detriment when it comes down to actual learning? Who knows, I have no idea what it's like to play at high stakes games where the "cards don't matter", so fwiw.

I think there are some clear similarities but by understanding them alone won't make me a profitable trader. Some of the traits that I think are useful are: not being results oriented, having no fear of placing a bet/trade, understand risk vs. reward better than most, understand bankroll management to a tee, calculating odds and probabilites, and using statistics to create an edge.

Quite a few top tier firms use poker in their training process so there's gotta be at least a decent correlation.
 
Quote from bespoke:

I guess you have no clue about poker.
I guess you're right. I have no idea about poker. However, I know a guy who does, and they made a movie about him... I've been trying to get him to do business with me for some time since I met him in South Florida.
To the OP,

I, like a few other traders here made the transition. I didn't make as much as you do playing poker because I couldn't build a large enough bankroll because of all my expenses (university, car, rent, etc). Though I averaged 50/hour at the casinos, and 40/hour online over the 2-3 years I played as my only source of income. Meh, at least it was tax free.

While I was learning how to trade I played on weekends just to stay alive. I can tell you this, trading as a job is 10x better than poker. I hated playing poker after I knew how to make money because it was such a boring grind. I suppose trading isn't that much better but at least you don't have to tell people that you play poker for a living. Sure it sounds cool when you're 21, but not later in life. And while you wait for setups you can surf the web and relax. Can't do that with your eyes glued to 8 tables. And no more 24-48 hour sessions.....

Trading is now much more profitable for me than poker was. I suggest you do both for now. Move to Vegas and trade in the morning then play poker in the evening. You'll learn how to trade quickest if you do it full time and if you don't have to worry about money. Your opportunity costs are huge. I would never stop playing until you make the same amount trading.

I went to the casino today and played for the first time in a year. Made 10 BB an hour, yippie. But was boring as hell. Even went 2.5 hours without a winning a hand. No desire to go back for this donkey.
 
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