Quote from Swan Noir:
Whether it is 98 or 99.5% who fail is irrelevant. The purpose here is to show that while the odds of becoming a consistently profitable trader are long they are not as bad as they might appear to the casual observer.
1) Half (or more) of those that wash out start (and end) with some FOREX bucket shop. By not being among that half your 2% chance of making it jumps to 4%. Not bad considering all you had to do to double your chances was decide not to be an asshole.
2) Of the remaining half at least half of those have never had a real success in their lives nor are they likely to knock it out of the park ever. If you are not among this group you double your chances again. You go from 4% to 8%.
3) Of the remaining 25% at least half are inept at building relationships of any kind. Many came from dysfunctional families and instead of getting a grip and overcoming that disability they embraced it and it means there are self centered, needy etc. When they finally get into a conversation here or in a chat or wherever with real traders they ask inane questions showing they doubt anyone is telling the truth, let their fear and discouragement color everything they say and end up with zero relationships. When they finally have a question to ask that counts they have no one to turn to. They resent that they get no help and come off like they are entitled to our time and attention. Bingo ... do not be one of them, double your chances and now your at 16%.
4) Of the troops that are left some simply do not have talent for this, others do not study as hard as they should and yet others simply let life distract them. I will not try to put a number on these failings but we know it is a fair number of those that try anything difficult.
I am still a struggling trader yet at the point where I learn more in a week than I did in a month. My guess is before the end of this year I will be consistent enough to take a big breath and relax. Even then I will not have begun to yet make real money but my risk of ruin will continue to drop considerably. And, since the key is to get good enough to survive for the years it takes to become a seasoned pro, that is an important milestone. Real traders make serious money taking on reasonable levels of risk. That is the goal.
My purpose here is not to portray trading as easy. I suspect for most the odds do not get much better than 1 in 5. Far from a lock yet not an out bet. Do not listen to those who say it cannot be done yet understand it will take everything you have to get it done.
And remember, not being an asshole sure helps. But, as we all know, that is not quite as easy as it sounds.
Quote from al trader:
everybody will lose. end of story
Quote from gnode:
Keep in mind many people fool themselves by remembering their wins with more enthusiasm than their losses.
As far as defaulting, we won't.
Read the 14th amendment of the constitution. It basically states that the US will pay on its debt no matter what.
The people who will lose are federal employees who go on furlough, social security beneficiaries, medicare doctors, and possibly soldiers.
That said, who is retarded enough to buy 10 year notes at 3% other than people who are absolutely required to do SOMETHING with their money?
Quote from bone:
98% of the people who start a small business fail. 98% of the people who start a restaurant fail. 98% of the college sophomores who declare pre-med ultimately never graduate medical school. 98% of the people who declare themselves as a candidate for US President fail.
So what ? Name one worthwhile endeavor where there is a high initial success rate. Trading is not easy. Many take several bites off the apple. But if you are good enough to make a consistent living at it, there can be no logical denial that it is better than just about any other enterprise most people could think of.
Populating this board with this silly refrain is exactly akin to a doctor reciting the same hollow mantra on a medical blog: "98% of pre-med students never graduate medical school"... so what ?


Quote from emg:
http://articles.latimes.com/2011/apr/03/business/la-fi-amateur-currency-trading-20110403
According to this article, 98% of traders lose annual. Of the 615K accounts, 605K accounts lose
More than 90% of small traders lose. They just lose!!