Quote from leonhua:
Where can I get some good education about trading with thinkorswim?
Any good advisory letters that are profitable and educative?
I'm from Vancouver, BC. Looking for a coach/mentor. Anyone up for the challenge?
Thanks,
Leon
Quote from the1:
I'm gonna give you the best piece of advice you'll ever hear and hopefully you won't forget it. Give up on trading now and go back to school. Put your heart and soul into some other profession. This is coming from a guy who has been trading profitably for 20 years. Do something else.
Quote from leonhua:
Where can I get some good education about trading with thinkorswim?
Any good advisory letters that are profitable and educative?
I'm from Vancouver, BC. Looking for a coach/mentor. Anyone up for the challenge?
Thanks,
Leon
Quote from lpchad:
Worst advice ever.
Quote from TraderZones:
You are wrong. The advice was extremely good. Trying to make it in trading is one of the most extreme wastes of time in the world.
It is believed that maybe 95% of traders lose their money. But of the remaining "5%" - almost all of them only break even, make small amounts, or are profitable for only a short time. Or they are "pre Risk of Ruin" traders who did not get the inevitable come-uppance yet.
I would say the number of traders who make a longterm very good living from trading is something less than 0.3% of all traders who try. Few people have the resources (tens of thousands $$$) and maybe 8-12,000 hours of screen time.
They read books, chase indicators, get self-dazzled with Gann, EW, Fibs, pitchforks, and then wander around, blow up, give up, retry, and eventually disappear into the tar pit of trading reality.
The paper trading masses of EliteTrader is no judge of "trading success" but of the fact that they are trader wannabes.
Quote from TraderZones:
You are wrong. The advice was extremely good. Trying to make it in trading is one of the most extreme wastes of time in the world.
It is believed that maybe 95% of traders lose their money. But of the remaining "5%" - almost all of them only break even, make small amounts, or are profitable for only a short time. Or they are "pre Risk of Ruin" traders who did not get the inevitable come-uppance yet.
I would say the number of traders who make a longterm very good living from trading is something less than 0.3% of all traders who try. Few people have the resources (tens of thousands $$$) and maybe 8-12,000 hours of screen time.
They read books, chase indicators, get self-dazzled with Gann, EW, Fibs, pitchforks, and then wander around, blow up, give up, retry, and eventually disappear into the tar pit of trading reality.
The paper trading masses of EliteTrader is no judge of "trading success" but of the fact that they are trader wannabes.
Quote from hoffmanw:
Trading is perhaps the hardest career of all. It demands far more efforts and dedications than physicist/geneticist/chemist ever put into their professions.