Quote from brownsfan019:
What a great, informative post!
How about - why do you think poker cannot aid an aspiring trader?
Is it the patience part (see above), money management, learning your competition, picking your spots... what part(s) are not useful exactly?
Quote from intradaybill:
The question was whether poker can help trading. You are reversing the question now and you are asking what parts of poker are not useful to trading.
You are reversing the burden of proof, a notorious logical fallacy. If you are trying to convince me that God exists, the burden of proof is on you, it is not on me to try to prove He does not exist.
Trading: many players, open game
Poker: few players, closed game
Poker: strictly zero-sum
Trading: positive or negative sum, depending on benchmark
Poker: few opportunities to revalue probability of initial bet
Trading: many opportunities to revalue probability of a bet (most important difference)
Poker: game has fixed start and end
Trading: open start - open end
and so on,
So tell me now, do you still think poker and trading have something to share?
Quote from magix3d:
What aspects of poker will help an aspiring trader? I'm a fairly horrible poker player and I was thinking that getting better at poker would help my patience. Thoughts?
Quote from DeeDeeTwo:
As someone who is a VERY successful trader...
And have executed about 1,500,000 trades in my career...
And have put a LOT of time into poker over 5 years...
I almost 100% disagree with you.
Your thinking is based on the erroneous belief...
That successful traders make large directional bets...
And somehow outmaneuver large firms...
In a rigged, computer-driven, corrupt ecosystem...
When in fact virtually all successful trading firms...
Practice some form of market-neutral arbitrage or make markets.
The core skills required to play elite poker...
Are very different from those required to run a risk arbitrage operation...
Specifically, a poker player MUST enjoy gambling...
And MUST enjoy taking risks large enough to result in ruin.
That's why 90% of poker pros have degen gambling issues...
Self-identify themselves as "gamblers"...
Having CHOSEN a career with 10-20 times the variance of trading..
In sharp contrast...
Pro Traders view themselves as businessmen...
And generally have no interest in high risk gambling.
The mathematical skills required may be similar...
But poker and trading on an elite level...
Require very different personality types.
To put it a different way...
Successful trading firms position themselves as the Casino...
Top Poker Pros are forever the Gambler.
