I will start by saying that this is my first and last post in this or any other forum of any kind. I am writing this because I benefited from this forum when I was applying to join SMB Capital and I see that obviously thereâs a big lack of information and experience around these forums. I will not check or reply to any posts, but I hope this helps some of you to make a good decision about joining a prop trading firm.
The first thing I would recommend to anyone considering joining true prop trading is to find out more about it, no matter how much you think you know. Learning to become a profitable trader is a lot more like trying to become a professional poker player than anything else. For those on this forum who mention wanting to make $250k or asking how much you could make compared to working for a hedge fund or an investment bank, trading is not for you. Trading has to choose you, you donât choose trading. If youâre looking for the highest paying job, trading is not for you. There is no practical reason to decide to trade intraday at a prop shop, your odds of making it big are as big as if you decide to become rich by becoming an artist or a professional poker player, 1 in 10,000. And the people who make it are not the ones who are in it for the money, but the ones who enjoy the process, with all its challenges. You HAVE TO love something about the trading process in order to make it, because learning to become consistently profitable will be the most frustrating thing youâve ever done.
The second thing I would say is that to go into a prop shopâs trading training program you should be ready to tell all your family and friends that youâre trying to become a professional poker player and that you havenât made a penny in a year. Did I just mention poker again? You bet I did. I do not play poker, but I have come to understand how much closer of a metaphor and lifestyle it is than almost anything else. Saying you take risk FEELS very different when you say youâre trading stocks and when you say youâre trying to become a professional poker player, the first couple months. But the process is the same. And after a few losing months of losing you will feel embarrassed. How will you explain to your family and college buddies (some of whom are making a killing with more stable jobs) and that hot chick at the bar that you havenât made a penny in a year? How will you explain that you had to take a part time job in the food industry? Or that you are still being supported by your parents?
The answer of course, is f*ck you, I want to trade so thatâs what I do, and those are the people who may become hugely successful in trading (and poker, painting, etc). In all of these fields, there are probabilities and skills involved, and the latter is what makes all the difference at a very high level.
If youâre wondering whether you should become a trader, the answer is simple. NO. Do not become a trader.
If you know enough about trading to the extent that you feel you have to give it a shot, please read on.
By the way, I am strictly speaking about trading where you take real risk. If you are looking or have a job where you put orders through and make a small but safe spread, none of this applies. Thereâs no reason to read or write a post on those jobs, itâs in the job description, and you take no real risk. God bless, your life will be a lot easier.
As a preamble I should say I am 30 years old and Iâve worked in Wall Street for the last 6 years. I got a 1540 on the SAT, back when the maximum you could get was 1600 and I have the series 3, 6, 63 and 7. I left my job at a bank thatâs too big to fail to join SMB. I say this because I know in these anonymous forums thereâs a lot of people who live in their momâs basements, havenât had a single job but somehow always have an opinion about something (usually negative). So I just want to establish that thatâs not where Iâm coming from.
Going into SMB Foundation you feel like youâre thrown in the water. Thereâs so much stuff to learn. The program is obviously a labor of love. They put so much time in it, I couldnât recommend it more. A bunch of reading and video lectures, it really gives you a taste of what you will need to learn to become successful. This program you can just get access by paying for it, you donât need to apply and can do it from home. The next stage is called Trader Development, and this stage you cannot just buy, you have to be accepted to. That means you actually joined the desk, whether in person or remotely. Itâs supposed to last 2-3 months, but it really lasts for as long as you last (about half of my training class of 14 was gone by month 5). This is where you really start learning to trade, because youâre trading live, and when youâre trading live and not just watching videos all day everything changes. All of a sudden you realize that all the work you put into SMB Foundation is nothing compared to whatâs coming. Youâll probably lose money doing the same thing you saw in the training videos every day. You will be very confused. Youâll find that the things that were working last month are no longer working and youâll have to adapt. When you review your work you wonât be able to tell whether something worked out of luck or because you did something right. You will draw the wrong conclusion many times, this is the school of hard knocks. This is where it helps a lot to be at a desk, because you will learn from the people around you, even relatively new people, but also some more experienced traders. Being around other traders has its own challenges. You will see other people do better even though you know they may be reckless or work less than you. You donât know how this is going to affect you until you go through it. After 3 months of not meeting your goals, you will think maybe trading is not for you, but that is also part of the training program. You have to go through it to know it. And if you donât have a good reason to put up with all the BS required, you WILL NOT succeed. The point is that itâs not about SMB or whatever company (although some companies are super shady), but it is about skill and understanding this business, and believing in yourself and respecting the learning curve. Hard work is not enough, you will have to give learning to trade TIME. You will have to learn price patterns subconsciously to develop conviction which is what will allow you to really milk winning trades.
I believe the learning curve is longer than the 8 months SMB suggests. I think realistically 18 months is more like it. Thatâs a big different for someone planning to pay rent on their own, so pay heed. I think the main things SMB needs to improve are the following: They should make a big effort to retain experienced traders. In this cynical world, once someone figures out they can trade they will leave for whomever gives them a bigger payout. SMB has a niche in training new traders, but the floor would be a lot better if there were more experienced traders in the companyâs payroll who feel that itâs in their best interest that other people do well in their trading. Give the mentors a bigger incentive, percentage of profits or whatever. Steve and Bella know trading very well, youâll learn from them, but theyâre not just traders, theyâre also running a firm so theyâre spread thin. To be honest, I was very disappointed with the mentorship at the beginning but then I realized that given the low success rate and high turnover in trading it makes sense. Mentorship does NOT exist in the industry unless you make friends. The main thing is to make friends with people who are serious about trading, and I made a few of those. The people who posted here saying thereâs no incentive for a professional to teach you are too cynical. The human desire to teach is at least as big as the desire to learn or to make money, but you have you find your own teachers (one SMB friend who trained with me left to work as trading assistant for a former head of UBS equities - the guy is over 60, and absolutely ready and willing to teach).
Although I love trading, I donât feel financially secure enough at this time to keep doing it, and I just got a job and Iâm leaving. Itâs been an amazing experience, very bittersweet. Iâm happy to leave even though my trading mission is not complete and SMB made me addicted to trading stocks. I think I got a fair chance, but Iâd rather take a break now, and I will be back later. The most important thing I can say to anyone is to focus on whether you really understand trading. I donât want to say the firm where you work doesnât matter, there are a lot of arcades where you have a 0% chance of success, where they have no edge and just want your commissions. SMB is a legitimate firm and they have a system that works. The office has a professional environment and the caliber of the other recruits was very high. I was really, very angry at SMB at some points, but whenever I took the perspective that as a trader youâre just running your own business and theyâre consultants helping you along, I was very happy to have joined the desk. SMB does charge about $10k to everyone joining the program. I think it's worth it and I would pay it again, but it depends on your priorities and expectations.
Good luck in your future careers to everyone.
The first thing I would recommend to anyone considering joining true prop trading is to find out more about it, no matter how much you think you know. Learning to become a profitable trader is a lot more like trying to become a professional poker player than anything else. For those on this forum who mention wanting to make $250k or asking how much you could make compared to working for a hedge fund or an investment bank, trading is not for you. Trading has to choose you, you donât choose trading. If youâre looking for the highest paying job, trading is not for you. There is no practical reason to decide to trade intraday at a prop shop, your odds of making it big are as big as if you decide to become rich by becoming an artist or a professional poker player, 1 in 10,000. And the people who make it are not the ones who are in it for the money, but the ones who enjoy the process, with all its challenges. You HAVE TO love something about the trading process in order to make it, because learning to become consistently profitable will be the most frustrating thing youâve ever done.
The second thing I would say is that to go into a prop shopâs trading training program you should be ready to tell all your family and friends that youâre trying to become a professional poker player and that you havenât made a penny in a year. Did I just mention poker again? You bet I did. I do not play poker, but I have come to understand how much closer of a metaphor and lifestyle it is than almost anything else. Saying you take risk FEELS very different when you say youâre trading stocks and when you say youâre trying to become a professional poker player, the first couple months. But the process is the same. And after a few losing months of losing you will feel embarrassed. How will you explain to your family and college buddies (some of whom are making a killing with more stable jobs) and that hot chick at the bar that you havenât made a penny in a year? How will you explain that you had to take a part time job in the food industry? Or that you are still being supported by your parents?
The answer of course, is f*ck you, I want to trade so thatâs what I do, and those are the people who may become hugely successful in trading (and poker, painting, etc). In all of these fields, there are probabilities and skills involved, and the latter is what makes all the difference at a very high level.
If youâre wondering whether you should become a trader, the answer is simple. NO. Do not become a trader.
If you know enough about trading to the extent that you feel you have to give it a shot, please read on.
By the way, I am strictly speaking about trading where you take real risk. If you are looking or have a job where you put orders through and make a small but safe spread, none of this applies. Thereâs no reason to read or write a post on those jobs, itâs in the job description, and you take no real risk. God bless, your life will be a lot easier.
As a preamble I should say I am 30 years old and Iâve worked in Wall Street for the last 6 years. I got a 1540 on the SAT, back when the maximum you could get was 1600 and I have the series 3, 6, 63 and 7. I left my job at a bank thatâs too big to fail to join SMB. I say this because I know in these anonymous forums thereâs a lot of people who live in their momâs basements, havenât had a single job but somehow always have an opinion about something (usually negative). So I just want to establish that thatâs not where Iâm coming from.
Going into SMB Foundation you feel like youâre thrown in the water. Thereâs so much stuff to learn. The program is obviously a labor of love. They put so much time in it, I couldnât recommend it more. A bunch of reading and video lectures, it really gives you a taste of what you will need to learn to become successful. This program you can just get access by paying for it, you donât need to apply and can do it from home. The next stage is called Trader Development, and this stage you cannot just buy, you have to be accepted to. That means you actually joined the desk, whether in person or remotely. Itâs supposed to last 2-3 months, but it really lasts for as long as you last (about half of my training class of 14 was gone by month 5). This is where you really start learning to trade, because youâre trading live, and when youâre trading live and not just watching videos all day everything changes. All of a sudden you realize that all the work you put into SMB Foundation is nothing compared to whatâs coming. Youâll probably lose money doing the same thing you saw in the training videos every day. You will be very confused. Youâll find that the things that were working last month are no longer working and youâll have to adapt. When you review your work you wonât be able to tell whether something worked out of luck or because you did something right. You will draw the wrong conclusion many times, this is the school of hard knocks. This is where it helps a lot to be at a desk, because you will learn from the people around you, even relatively new people, but also some more experienced traders. Being around other traders has its own challenges. You will see other people do better even though you know they may be reckless or work less than you. You donât know how this is going to affect you until you go through it. After 3 months of not meeting your goals, you will think maybe trading is not for you, but that is also part of the training program. You have to go through it to know it. And if you donât have a good reason to put up with all the BS required, you WILL NOT succeed. The point is that itâs not about SMB or whatever company (although some companies are super shady), but it is about skill and understanding this business, and believing in yourself and respecting the learning curve. Hard work is not enough, you will have to give learning to trade TIME. You will have to learn price patterns subconsciously to develop conviction which is what will allow you to really milk winning trades.
I believe the learning curve is longer than the 8 months SMB suggests. I think realistically 18 months is more like it. Thatâs a big different for someone planning to pay rent on their own, so pay heed. I think the main things SMB needs to improve are the following: They should make a big effort to retain experienced traders. In this cynical world, once someone figures out they can trade they will leave for whomever gives them a bigger payout. SMB has a niche in training new traders, but the floor would be a lot better if there were more experienced traders in the companyâs payroll who feel that itâs in their best interest that other people do well in their trading. Give the mentors a bigger incentive, percentage of profits or whatever. Steve and Bella know trading very well, youâll learn from them, but theyâre not just traders, theyâre also running a firm so theyâre spread thin. To be honest, I was very disappointed with the mentorship at the beginning but then I realized that given the low success rate and high turnover in trading it makes sense. Mentorship does NOT exist in the industry unless you make friends. The main thing is to make friends with people who are serious about trading, and I made a few of those. The people who posted here saying thereâs no incentive for a professional to teach you are too cynical. The human desire to teach is at least as big as the desire to learn or to make money, but you have you find your own teachers (one SMB friend who trained with me left to work as trading assistant for a former head of UBS equities - the guy is over 60, and absolutely ready and willing to teach).
Although I love trading, I donât feel financially secure enough at this time to keep doing it, and I just got a job and Iâm leaving. Itâs been an amazing experience, very bittersweet. Iâm happy to leave even though my trading mission is not complete and SMB made me addicted to trading stocks. I think I got a fair chance, but Iâd rather take a break now, and I will be back later. The most important thing I can say to anyone is to focus on whether you really understand trading. I donât want to say the firm where you work doesnât matter, there are a lot of arcades where you have a 0% chance of success, where they have no edge and just want your commissions. SMB is a legitimate firm and they have a system that works. The office has a professional environment and the caliber of the other recruits was very high. I was really, very angry at SMB at some points, but whenever I took the perspective that as a trader youâre just running your own business and theyâre consultants helping you along, I was very happy to have joined the desk. SMB does charge about $10k to everyone joining the program. I think it's worth it and I would pay it again, but it depends on your priorities and expectations.
Good luck in your future careers to everyone.