Some more information about myself and situation. Not only will I be trading my colleague's money, I will be putting up 15k myself. After market hours, I will be working part-time to add money to my trading account (I am guessing that I can obtain about $900 a week). Yes, in the realm of things, this doesn't make my me capitalized by any means. Thankfully, and I truly am, my wife will be supporting us financially. And one other note, these colleagues are just that, colleagues. We know each and have worked with each other. I wouldn't call them my friends and they wouldn't call me their friend.
A few comments about prior posts. Yes, I will consider a prop firm and look more into the training they can provide me. Of course learning from others that have made it in the business as well as those who haven't is valuable. I'm leery of the bad rep some of these prop firms have for themselves, but I admit my sample size is small and my information about them is limited. I noticed a recent thread about what prop firms provide the best training and hope to keep my eye on it to see what others are saying.
let it run, with being a rookie in anything you do, i agree completely, their will be struggles to get to where you want to be and even when you are there, you must likely will struggle to stay there. Yes, you may be a right in my idiotic thinking about making money, but my thoughts about money stem from my strategy and my time and dedication to developing a system that works for me. I know that I am a tad on the yellow side in terms of trading skills, but I'm willing to learn and willing to roll with the punches while attempting to avoid the knockout blow.
part systems, I hear ya on your concern about having an advanced degree and believing that I am invincible. I know some of these people and it's all too sad. You really can't have a conversation with them without them trying to prove they are smarter than you. I know that I am not invincible, I plan on losing money on my journey to becoming a trader, and I'm okay with this. Between classes and projects, I am glued to the market. I have a system that I developed and tweaked over the year that has been profitable (yes, I know it's paper trading and it doesn't really count nor does it guarantee that I will be profitable with real money on the line). I believe that I will be able to handle the emotions of trading with money on the line. In my training, I was taught how to deal with my emotions, both as a professional working with clients and as a human being in general. I believe these skills will generalize to trading. I'm not saying the strong emotions of fear or greed will not be there, but I think I will be able to identify them and cope with them effectively.
thanks for the posts...keep them coming. if any of the new information I have provided in this post changes your perspective let me know.
scotch