I do like that I am flat at the end of the day. No worrying over night about a Gap up or down, which for options does happen. I also like the quick result, either win or lose.
You are definitely one of the few, Ironchef, one of the few that does not come to ET with an ego but with simple honesty and humility. And, you have not been lucky at all. You just observed the opportunities presented to you and took advantage of them. I would loved to have been in your circle and known you in real life. Best wishes to you in your second retirement although I know you will always be in the market in some aspect.I have been around ET since 2014. Lots of new retails came in with the idea of day trading for a living. Not too many are still around.
I position trades and speculate with options and am one of the lucky few, started in 2010 with a good size AUM and rode this bull market for a decade and a half.
It is pure luck. Time to retire a second time.
that a Gap up / Gap down happens on the stock and the Option I am holding gets slaughtered... just happened to me last week on DDOGWhat do you mean by "for options does happen"??
Are you referring to options as in derivatives?
I also work while I trade.. so I do both. I work from home so I can do that...Am I the only one that looks at the opportunity cost of Day Trading(high paying job with benefits)??
I am also assuming no one here is talking about Day Trading right out of college,or under 25
that a Gap up / Gap down happens on the stock and the Option I am holding gets slaughtered... just happened to me last week on DDOG
You forgot D) DaBagholderWhere is WXYtrader when you need him?
He has a simple solution....
Dont like losing trades??
Simple
Start on the smallest time frame possible,and if wrong, follow the ABC's of trading
A) Day Trader> B) Swing Trader> C) Investor
No need to ever realize a loss![]()
No, this was I realisation I had when I was younger and somewhat more naive than now. I had quitted my job to go for daytrading. My friends slowly climbed the corporate ladder and bought bigger and bigger homes, while I was stuck and had to admit I failed. I also realized that trading needed a much higher return, eg a minimum of 600k p/a to become somewhat comparable with a 'riskless' job. Suppose you pass 40 and the last 8 years on the resume are daytrading, it is somewhat difficult to explain. Possible yes, but difficult.Am I the only one that looks at the opportunity cost of Day Trading(high paying job with benefits)??
I am also assuming no one here is talking about Day Trading right out of college,or under 25
No, this was I realisation I had when I was younger and somewhat more naive than now. I had quitted my job to go for daytrading. My friends slowly climbed the corporate ladder and bought bigger and bigger homes, while I was stuck and had to admit I failed. I also realized that trading needed a much higher return, eg a minimum of 600k p/a to become somewhat comparable with a 'riskless' job. Suppose you pass 40 and the last 8 years on the resume are daytrading, it is somewhat difficult to explain. Possible yes, but difficult.