Quote from Jtrader342:
I agree the 30K and 50K accounts may not be worth messing with.
Actually, this is what TST recommends for the scouting combine. Again, see my example above. I'm also approaching this as an equity trader. Although the goal for obtaining "main income" is the larger combine, jumping in with the 100k combine doesn't make sense unless you routinely trade close to 10,000 shares of stock and watch your p&l fluctuate in $100 dollar increments for each penny of movement. It doesn't matter if you're trading 3 products and 3 lots each, or 9 lots of one, the amount of p&l fluctuation is the same. Yes, you can always "scale up" when you're in the money on a trade with the 100k account, however you can lose it just fast with an abrupt turn in the market.
My plan is to take a conservative and structured approach. Try the smaller combine, get the funded account, build the profit cushion, take the withdrawal, THEN go for the larger combine. Of course, you can select any combine you choose, this is just the way I would do it. If you select the larger combine up front, then you have no choice but to build size to meet the p&l objective, and thus see large swings in your p&l that you may not feel comfortable with.
Quote from Jtrader342:
BTW, I asked another trader I know (from another community) to check out the offer and let me know what he thought of it. His reply was "scam...ask yourself why would they take that chance or offer that to just anyone". Hence my math and these questions. I am "asking" myself that question. The more I dig, the more I like it though. I doubt he looked at the program actually as I described it in my message to him.
Thanks guys,
J.
Opinions are abundant, just review the other TST threads, lol. I actually prefer reading a broad spectrum of posts, whether it's positive or negative, as it causes one to conduct proper due diligence before making their decision. A "scam" in my book is when a firm closes shop without returning capital to their traders, or if a firm doesn't honor its terms of an agreement, but to each his own.