One of my friends is a successful self-employed futures day trader, and I have him to mentor me.
As long as I do proper risk management and not consistently make stupid trading decisions, I should do well, as most day trading failures are due to improper risk management.
It's mentoring if he's walking you through your trades in person and you're able to see him trade in person in front of your own two eyes. I'm just not a believer that someone can mentor another trader via online because most trading problems can only be caught in person by someone sitting side by side next to you. Simply, ask your friend to visit you during trading sessions and use online as follow-up to whatever it is you've learned in person.
By the way, there was a poll once taken several years back about the top 5 reasons for failure at day trading (about 1500 traders took the poll)...discipline problems, lack of trading plan, improper trade environment, improper trade instrument and money management problems. I think risk management was listed as a sub-group of money management.
I was a little surprised that under-capitalized wasn't in the top 5 as a reason but your rule 1 contract per 20k for the Eminis is a good start for capitalization...enough to get your feet wet, experience a few small drawdowns and then hopefully right the ship.
...Pay myself 50% of my weekly profits, and once I double my account, double the number of contracts I trade...
I don't think you should be concentrating on how much money you've determine you "can" make. Instead, concentrate on having a complete trading plan so that you can consistently execute your trade method. Concentrating on profits at this stage so soon is a red warning sign as a discretionary trader unless you're talking automation trading.
If you do everything right and avoid the typical reasons for failure, the profits will soon follow and that's when you can then talk about profits.
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