<i>"Well, there's a difference between day trading day after day, year after year, making money and holding bonds for 30 years, no?"
"No. Money is money. If I make 20% a year in bonds or daytrade and make 20% a year adjusting for taxes and costs, it's the same thing." </i>
Austin, you need to go back to school dude. Bonds in the 1980's traded at 15% coupon yields and traded at 30 cents on the dollar. And yes, people held them for 30 years. A little fyi, in the mid 1980's, a lot of guys retired from the cbot trading floor because rates were so high and they could lock in 15% to 20% for the rest of their career and they walked away from the business. Bonds actually traded at those yields for about 5 years. Perhaps your knowledge of history is just weak, but Paul Volker came in and raised rates that high to kill the inflation from the 1970's and it worked and he set off one of the greatest bull markets in history that only came to an end just 2 years ago.
worthless analogy: many traders have made 20% annual thru lots of different "edges" but no one on earth has ever bought & held 30yr bonds for 20% annual returns over time. Please! If that were even remotely possible, short-term trading would not exist.
See comments above.
A professional gambler's "edge" is mental ability to count cards in blackjack or assess % win probabilities in poker. By mav's definition of "edge" there ain't a single WSOP champion who has an edge, and lots of those players have made eight-figures in their careers.
Counting cards is NOT the same thing as charting moving averages. LOL. Good Lord. Guys counted cards because there were a FINITE number of cards!!!!!! The WSOP is a horrible analogy to poker. Poker has a fixed number of players and a fixed pot. Again, any game that has a finite structure to it can be modeled quite easily as there are a limited number of outcomes and choices.
Mav, your personal definition of a trader's "edge" means literally nothing to anyone else. It is merely your own personal opinion, that's all.
It's not an opinion, it's math. That same math is the reason every one of your combines crashed and burned. If you had a real edge Austin, no rules in the world could keep you from passing the combine because you could use the Kelly Criterion to optimize your leverage given your edge and the risk TST allows you to take. But you can't use the Kelly formula if you don't have an edge. That dog don't hunt.
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