Quote from ctarmor-et:
You are reponsible for all your losses.
Although your account will be probably liquidated once your looses are "almost" close to "you capital contribution = losses". You do not eat up the company leverage ...
Quote from Szeven:
Except for thats now how swifttrade works. There is no 'capital contribution'.
More likely, you would start as a trainee with a $50 stop and when you hit it a few times in a week, you would get fired. If on the off chance you actually succeeded to the point of a $300 stop, you would most definitly be liquidated at a $600 loss, and if you are allowed to continue your employment, any other sign of disobediance or a blatent disregard for the rules would have you terminated immediately.
Its not rocket science, swift succeeds on the same principles as good daytraders.... discipline and risk control.
Quote from 4DTrader:
There is a problem in your training by focusing on profit and loss. If the trainee consistently loses $10 a day, what would you do? Fire him or keep him? If the guy makes a right bet and makes $100 on a certain day, what would you say to the guy? "Good job"? If he decides to do it again and ends up on the wrong side and loses $100, what would you do to him? Fire him?
Quote from wutangfinancial:
see, that's the probelm with chop shops. They force you to make money by increasing the % of winning trades, and trading small and often (basically, scalping).
The way I know how to make money in markets-swing/position trading with an assymetric payoff. I load up on idiosyncratic risk, but hold multiple long/short positions, with no beta exposure, and over time, I generate serious alpha. On a short time scale, any prop firm with riskware would force me to get flat most of the time. But my lack of short term risk aversion is what make me money. Is there any firm that will give me this autonomy? Or is a hedge fund structure the only way to go?