Read up on Lawrence Harris and find out which kind of trader you are and who you are trading against.
Unfortunately, for most of us, we have only been doing research.Trading is positive zero-sum game
Rational traders will not play a true zero-sum game in which they only value
trading profits. If all traders were all alike, all expected returns would be
zero and no one would benefit from trading. If some traders are more skilled
than others, the skilled traders would want to trade but the unskilled traders
would not. No one would trade. To explain why rational traders trade, we must
recognize that some people trade for more than just expected profits. People
trade to hedge risk, to move funds from one point in time to another, to
exchange assets, to earn an unconditional expected return, to learn whether they
can expect to profit from trading and to take pleasure from gambling. These
external benefits make trading a positive-sum game. If the external benefits to
trading are great enough, traders will trade even though they expect to lose.
Skilled traders will profit to the extent that unskilled traders are willing to
trade for external reasons. Market prices efficiently incorporate information
about value fundamentals when skilled traders obtain this information and trade
upon it in search of profits. The activity is profitable if the trading profits
exceed the costs of obtaining and acting upon the information. If no one traded
for external benefits, skilled traders could not profit from trading. They would
quit doing their research, they would not trade, and prices would not be
efficient.
This problem is known as the Grossman-Stiglitz paradox. Price efficiency depends
both on skilled traders and on traders who are willing or irrational losers. The
skilled traders make prices efficient and the losers pay for their research
efforts.