i had to take a break from "PRINTING MONEY"to put some time into this.
Professionals= make money
all the others lose money
it is that simple
Professionals= make money
all the others lose money
it is that simple
I can't teach anyone to think as a trader in a handful of phrases but if you let me know what is unclear to you I will try and clarify. I am in a trade so will answer when possible.the truth is i couldnt even understand what you are really trying to say. not because you are above me i am not sure it made sense how you wrote it. maybe help me out if you have the time and restate what you are trying to say ..thanks
i had to take a break from "PRINTING MONEY"to put some time into this.
Professionals= make money
all the others lose money
it is that simple
I never worked for Jump, but I did a stint as a PM for one of their direct competitors and I have worked with a number of their alumni in various places. You gonna find that while these ads say "blah", the reality is is blah^0.5 - there are plenty of people working for Jump that went to no-name schools and do not have a PhD.This is one of the few true "prop shops" that pay salaries. Take a look at the 52 job postings and see if you qualify. This should give you a feel for who they recruit. https://www.jumptrading.com/jobs.html
i've seen this elsewhere. retail traders have no edge, etc. but what is this based from? I don't think it's as black/white as you make it out to be, although probably 90% true.
I've done some reading on glassdoor and some prop firms and have pretty bad reviews. i saw a post accusing smb of being an education mill. with such a low retention rate, I think a lot of these reviews are pretty biased, which is part of what brought me here. also read that prop firms used to be very popular, due to low fees, but now that retail traders have pretty low fees, there's a lot less incentive to trade at prop firm.
Happy to get other perspectives, but back to the point of this thread. What separates the successes from the failures. What are those guys doing that others aren't, characteristics they have, how hard they work, etc. I think I have a general idea, but examples would be super helpful.
And you mentioned downside. Well downside is failure and not being able to be hired for another trading job and having to go back begging for a science job - fk that. I'm not saying it's going to happen, I think I have the work ethic and mindset to get through the hump, but it's a very real possibility. Just want to get a full perspective before taking a leap, as any rational person would do.