daytrading contests are for losers. daytrading a a losers game.
no edge, just random luck.
no edge, just random luck.
Quote from taclander:
Sorry if this intrudes on the thread, but somewhat related. When I was at the U of Minn. a couple of decades ago we had a teacher who did a markets class, and ran a trading contest in each class. You would report purchase/sell prices for equities, commodities, options to him and he would verify you could have entered or exited at the prices you claim. You had to call him with the trade before it would have traded your price supposedly. One kid turned in a 2500% + return in a quarter, so the teacher thought the kid was god. He took the kid and $25,000 of his own money, got a room in a hotel in Chicago, and they traded from the room calling in trades to a broker they set up with when they got there. Needless to say they burned $20,000 before the teacher realized it was a bad idea. No money management, and it became quickly apparent the kid had been lucky as heck.
The same teacher offered me up to $5000 dollars to get Sam Walton to come up and speak to the business school, but sadly all I could do was talk to one of his sons, who was in no way going to let me get through to his Dad.
Quote from Expect Positive:
I did a contest like this hosted by UBS back in college.
I was one of the winners and got to go on a trip to their Stamford trading room...
the unspoken truth was that all the winners had figured out the contest platform was running on delayed data. so, the winners weren't really great traders, and they weren't lucky...they just figured out how to game the system.