Quote from jack8031:
I do not care that 99% daytraders lose money.As long as I keep making money week in and week out.Look at the P&l of Redink,Weinstein and few others.most of people like starter of this thread get frustrated when they can not make money as a daytrader.This is a game of chance,most will lose few will win.I am very proud to be a profitable day/swing/position trader.Eat your heart out all you sour losers.
Translation = (Assuming I'm even telling the truth in the first place that I'm profitable, and for more than a day, or a week, or a month) I've been profitable for a period, though I haven't said for how long, day trading, nor have I posted any verification of said profitability, but statistically, with each passing day and additional trade, my chances of preventing losses narrows significantly, so much so that next week, next month or next year (does it matter, if one knows it's nearly inevitable? It's like waiting for the death sentence; appeals may delay it, but when the bell tolls for you, nothing in the past really matters), I may face the choice of having to stop trading, or risk losing my initial capital and whatever 'profit' I thought I once had booked, aka 'blowing up.'
*While there are consistently net-net profitable day traders, study after credible study show their numbers to be exceedingly few in number, both nominally and relative to the number of total 'attemptees.'
*Consequently, BLSH maintains his position (based on every conceivable credible study) that anyone aspiring to become a day trader improves their odds of consistent profitability trading by not relying on the profitability of the trading itself, but the commissions generated by trading (the matter of degree of loss and time of loss is a variable)
OPM. This means obtaining a position with a firm that has a book of clients, and suckering more clients into that book, which goes part and parcel with that 'profession.'