Poker player moving to trade/advise please

You called me an insufferable asshole on twitter and you want to get info from me? Ha Ha Ha whew. That’s ripe.


You won that round... I was not given a time out.

So who do you clear? Goldman/SLK? I got Dan "the fetus" Bongino a time out before he blocked me. So yeah, it does happen.
 
Clear? I don’t report ppl. I engage them. I may block you but never report. It’s childish. Ppl gotta grow up and face one another or just walk away. But “telling” on someone is 2nd grade nonsense.

So how does one face you after you've blocked them? Ostensibly, a report resulting in a time out in Twitter jail allows for further debate. Did you think this through?

Clear. Clearing firm.

Your access to dark pool data is... suspect.
 
What I am saying is if I get tired of engaging with someone, or the person really trolls I will eventually block. I will however engage first.

Clearing TDA.

You don’t have to believe it if you choose. It’s out there online. If you wanna search, and or pay for it. (Dark pool data)
 
Hi,
I am profesional poker player for 10 years. Lately the market for my kind of game shrunk and i am trying to expand my income with trading.
I started reading a book of techinical analysis and checking out some blogs.
I came here to ask for advise where to start and where to find the best material.

Thanks
This podcast of Jack Little goes over many of the similarities to good poker and trading.
You might also listen to the others (there are 100 or so) - picking up things from each - and many podcasts have great resource links blogs, websites and books.


https://chatwithtraders.com/ep-045-jack-little/
 
First and foremost, realize that many folks giving advice won't know wtf they're talking about.

IMO, start with books--not the internet. Start at bookstores, not libraries or Amazon. First read/buy books to see which style of trading you may be interested in: scalping (multiple 'round trips' per day), daytrading (one round trip per day or two), or swing trading (one round trip per day to several days). You may also, during this time-frame, figure whether you'd be interested in using computer technologies to assist with your trading, and to what extent.

The books will help, to the extent possible, to build a proper foundation.

From there, seek books on Amazon based upon ratings/sales/reviews/recommendations/etc.

Finally, you then should have a knowledge base sufficient enough to seek information from the internet, without being baffled by bullsh1t or felted :).

Good Luck, and keep us posted.
Look for " New Concepts in Technical Trading by Welles Wilder" get a full understanding of this book and understand there is no bluffing in trading. If it's a bad hand fold. That book was my introduction to trading many years ago .
 
What I am saying is if I get tired of engaging with someone, or the person really trolls I will eventually block. I will however engage first.

Clearing TDA.

You don’t have to believe it if you choose. It’s out there online. If you wanna search, and or pay for it. (Dark pool data)
After all this intense talk about dark pool I got interested to know what is. I did short research online but still not sure how it works
 
I would recommend going through the "Chat with Traders' podcasts. There are at least half a dozen top notch traders that came from pro gambling, including poker. They share their hard learned insights on their transition into profitable trading.

Anybody that says gambling has nothing to do with trading is sadly mistaken, smarter traders have always learned from pro gamblers how to manage risk.

Ed Thorp said that pro gamblers have a much easier time making a transition to trading, but traders will have a much harder time trying to become a pro gambler.

Just like with gambling it is bankroll mgmt & your own psychology that wins the game - trade selection has virtually nothing to do with being profitable.

the podcast is great. I already listened to 3 episodes. The more i read more i see similarities
Thanks!
 
I said to the OP:

First and foremost, realize that many folks giving advice won't know wtf they're talking about.

IMO, start with books--not the internet. Start at bookstores, not libraries or Amazon. First read/buy books to see which style of trading you may be interested in: scalping (multiple 'round trips' per day), daytrading (one round trip per day or two), or swing trading (one round trip per day to several days). You may also, during this time-frame, figure whether you'd be interested in using computer technologies to assist with your trading, and to what extent.

The books will help, to the extent possible, to build a proper foundation.

From there, seek books on Amazon based upon ratings/sales/reviews/recommendations/etc.

Finally, you then should have a knowledge base sufficient enough to seek information from the internet, without being baffled by bullsh1t or felted :).

Good Luck, and keep us posted.

And you replied to me:

Look for " New Concepts in Technical Trading by Welles Wilder" get a full understanding of this book and understand there is no bluffing in trading. If it's a bad hand fold. That book was my introduction to trading many years ago .

Maybe you meant to reply to the OP? ... Thanks anyhow. :)
 
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