If you passion for button pushing on your home computer is in ANY way related to gambling, get help.
Michael B.
Michael B.
Quote from HispaTrader:
NihabaAshi, thank you for laying out the options and sharing your experience with me. Please see my options below.
FT79, thanks for sharing your experience, it is helpful. I will not be putting myself in a situation that totally relies on my trading to pay the bills. Like many on the site have already mentioned, I think the pressure is enormous for someone trying to trade for a living, but has not achieved consistent profitability. Right now, quitting my job is not an option.
First of all, let me say that I have no debt and my mortgage is paid off. I have enough savings to support myself for 2 years and can start with a $75K-$100K trading account. I trade futures.
So here are the options I am considering:
1. Keep my current job and continue to trade as I am doing, trading part-time. Currently, I am trading during the morning, 3 days a week. I was hoping to increase my trading exposure.
2. Keep my current situation as described in #1, and take a leave absense in the fall from October to January. During this time, I will not receive a salary, but I'll have a job to go back too. The goal would be to determine if trading is really for me. Right now, I think trading full-time, if profitable, would be the best job for me.
3.. Keep my current job, but work part-time. Even part-time, my salary is quite good. I would then trade 3 full days a week.
4.. Take the promotion and stop daytrading. Focus on trading off of 120M/daily/weekly charts. This will allow me to continue to grow my trading account.
The great thing is that my boss will support me in whatever I do, but he will be definitely disappointed if I turn down the manager position. I consider myself fortunate to be able to pursue my trading while maintaining a great job. It reduces the risk and pressure substantially and allows me to ease into the trading profession.
Again, I do not plan to quit my job outright. I don't think that is a prudent thing to do given my trading experience. The only thing I lose by not taking the promotion is the promotion itself and approximately a 15-20% pay increase. If I take the promotion, I will not be doing it for the money, but for the job itself.
One other thing that I struggle with is this. When traders become profitable, do they typically continue to daytrade or do they "graduate" to swing/position trading, holding positions for days to weeks? In which case, holding another full-time job is possible. I am not sure if I am correct here or not.
Thanks again to all.
Quote from HispaTrader:
Hi Michael,
I strongly believe I have the right mind-set for trading and believe that that is what will get me to become a consistent winning trader sooner rather than later. I truly believe that having a successful "game" is 80% mental and 20% strategy. I also believe that most people fail as traders because they do not understand this. They focus on setups and not risk management and psychology.
Thanks for your input.
Quote from HispaTrader:
I am an Engineer for a well-known telecommunications company and have been offerred a technical manager position. This has been my career since I graduated from college. ....