Quote from Bolimomo:
Billy Simas:
Just to help you further - because you seem very levelheaded and down-to-earth... just to spark some thoughts:
You mentioned that you cannot trade at work because of company rules. Understood. You also mentioned that you have some semi-automated trading strategies. You are thinking of quitting your job because you want to trade your strategies during market hours. Understood.
How "automated" are your trading strategies? What is the missing piece that they are only "semi" automated? Because if you have them fully automated you can fire up your computer/software, go to work, and by the end of the day come home and see if it works/not-works. Test your strategies with small share sizes.
Do you need to eye-ball something before deciding to go/no-go? Or need to manually adjust some parameters based on the day's environment? Can you have somebody help you do that? For example, and don't laugh, your mom? Can you walk her through what it takes to run your machine? Or talk to her on cell phone at work?
There are other technologies available too, you know. e.g. WebEx. You can control your home computer via the Internet. There are other remote desktop technologies. If you can access a public Internet machine when you take a morning break. Since you have automated strategies you don't need to be a screen monkey like we are.
Anyway... just some ideas. You can keep your job, get the stable income, prove your trading theory, keep beefing up your account size, and let yourself grow gradually.
Thanks again for the feedback. They are semi-automated because the programming lacks the necessary filters to weed out bad trades. I can spot these visually but they are hard to code. The automation software that I use happens to be the same company that I work for, so trading this during the day (even if it's with remote desktop) is not an option because they would monitor my trading activity and I can't break any rules.
