Quote from Lucias:
Stop! Don't join any firm or pay for any training unless you can see real results from their traders. You need to ask yourself very critical questions before paying money.
1. Ask for track record/results that can be verified by an independent source. Find out if the results were hypothetical, real money, real time, etc. There is a big difference between a track record posted on a vendor website vs one that can be checked. If the results are hypothetical then make sure they are audited from a site like C2 versus just what the vendor said! Either way, I would want to see at least 1 year of results.
2. Do a deeper analysis on the track record. Determine if you meet capital requirements and what type of risks were taken to achieve the returns.
3. Check for alignment with trading goals/style
4. Speak to past students if they exist of training.
3k-5k is reasonable for training. I wouldn't offer training for less then around 3k myself but you need realistic expectations.
If you only have 10k and they are going to take that and rebate your trading, then that's a bad deal. I would not do any sort of rebate deal, at all. You want training, pay for training but paying someone to give you your own money to trade doesn't make any sense.
If they are claiming that you can trade for a living with 10k then they are full of it. I wouldn't even consider them if they made such a claim.
As for daily loss limits, you will need at least 1k per day of risk limit and probably 2x-3x that to be able to make a living. Any daily loss limit that is less then 1k should not even be considered. As a rule of thumb you should look at trying to make 20% to 30% of the loss limit, net.
couldn't have said it better myself. I usually tell people that 3-5k deposit is what I paid for a college course. Some I got immense value out of and some sucked and was a waste of money.
The factors that had to be taken into account were professor, topic, experience, etc. It's very similar with trading courses. Go in with realistic expectations.
Taking a pre-calculus course will not make you a mathematician and neither will taking a scalping course make you a consistently profitable trader. Do your due dillegence. 90% chance you will lose your money regardless of where you go, so make sure you can get the best experience for what you are beint charged, regardless of where you go.
. From what I see T3 is the a firm with some top notch traders(Redler, Sperling) who you put everything upfront and they make good money. They seem to be very open too with posting up positions and pnl everyday to lead by example. I don't know about the specifics of the operation but the guys that run the operation seem to be very good at what they do.