Quote from abc1:
Exactly, this is the point I am trying to make.
At most one can assume/make/ even hope (!) for a certain outcome with reasonable expectation but cannot guarantee it.
Therefore with results outside of one's control how can any one trader claim skill.
Traders saying they have skill is like me suggesting that a successful bet placed on Chicago Bulls winning a basketball game in the 1990s makes me Michael Jordan.
abc1
abc1 has started a very interesting discussion.
Here is my take from the perspective of a fulltime trader. I've been trading for 10 years (broke even first 2 years and have made at least six figures every year of the last 8 years).
The first couple years of making money more often then not felt like luck. However, I felt at times really 'skillful and smart'. The markets have gone through many changes since then and so has my viewpoint. Most of the time during those first few years I felt my luck would run out so I saved as much as I could.
But as each year goes by and I continue to increase my income...my view point as changed and I have become more comfortable with my trading future. I now liken trading successfully as more akin to being a casino. The casino (myself) has an edge over the gambling public. Over the short run, some gamblers might take some money from the casino. But over the long run, the casinos make money due to a built in edge (odds). I'm never 100% sure that a single trade will be a winner. But over the longer run, I'm more confident in my 'ability' to generate income.
