Some donate their time to the soup kitchen and some to food banks.why are you wasting your time here then
Others try to help us poor retail traders stay sober, like going to AA meetings.

Some donate their time to the soup kitchen and some to food banks.why are you wasting your time here then

Interesting. That seems like a very simple approach. Would you not use any other indicators like RSI or macd? What sort of instruments would you advocate using this 180ma approach? Many thanks.Remember the Kiss principle. Keep it Simple. Follow the trend. Trend following still works especially, in the long term. Where will it end? Who knows? It does not really matter. If you have discipline, you will make monies. That $4,000 you can compound over time. You can use a 100 day EMA and get in when the price crosses over and closes above the 100 Day EMA and then, exit when price closes below the 100 Day EMA. Rinse and repeat. You should win most of the trades and come out ahead. Do a manual backtest to have confidence that it stands a fair chance of working out.
Interesting. That seems like a very simple approach. Would you not use any other indicators like RSI or macd? What sort of instruments would you advocate using this 180ma approach? Many thanks.
Beautiful great post. I think you are right. Don't trade options until you are profitable in an instrument that is easier. Eg stocks. I like your point 4 about modelling. It was only when I did this that excel that I understood how debit and credit spreads worked.Don't trade options if you have never trade any instruments in the past. They look simple but are extremely difficult and complicated. Whether you buy, sell, spread, combination, hedge, the odds of making money in the long run is small. Why? Your counter parties are usually the market makers and professional traders who almost always have better tools and more capable than you.
Can it be done? Yes.I started a long time ago buying and selling equities while holding a day job. After I quit my day job, I tried day trading for a while, then swing trade equities for a few years until in 2013, started trading options. After 6 1/2 years, I am still a newbie.
I spend most of my days researching, modeling, reading (including reading ET) and occasionally place a trade or two. It is actually hard work but I enjoy it.
If you are still interested, here is my suggestion:
1. Don't quit your day job until you don't need a day job.
2. Read up on stocks, stock markets, economics, finance as much as you can. I took many free courses on Coursera.
3. Don't purchase any courses, they won't give you any more information that you can get from books or watching free YouTube. Read up on options using all the books mentioned. I would add one more once you understand options: Colin Bennett's book on Trading Volatility.
4. Try to learn how options are priced and try to do some basic modeling yourself using Excel, VBA....
5. Try backtest and forward test. I forward tested by using single lot, cheap options to see how the strategy behave with real money.
6. Becoming a full time retail trader like us.
Welcome to the club. It can be done if you have the passion to learn and are willing to work hard.
Good luck.
There is hope for you sir.I like your point 4 about modelling. It was only when I did this that excel that I understood how debit and credit spreads worked.

