What are the general Win rate and RR of professional/Full Time traders?

Lol thanks for trying to sound smart.
I have an audited third party track record,
if you've got proof of funds, I'll provide the documentation. It's as simple as that, one doesn't need to parade around and lie about what they do. It hurts everyone.

Where are the risk adjusted audited returns for Jack Hershey? I'm waiting.
You just registered last month, how do you even know who JH is?
 
Lol thanks for trying to sound smart.
I have an audited third party track record,
if you've got proof of funds, I'll provide the documentation. It's as simple as that, one doesn't need to parade around and lie about what they do. It hurts everyone.

Where are the risk adjusted audited returns for Jack Hershey? I'm waiting.
what's your fav measure of risk adjusted ?
 
50/50, same as a coin-toss. On numerous occasions, "professional" traders, mutual fund portfolio managers, hedge fund managers have been beaten horribly by animals like monkeys and cats and by dart-throwing.

Just to show you that the "professionals" do NOT know better and they do NOT trade better. The only difference between us and them is:

1) They are playing with other people's money and win or lose, they get paid whereas for us, unless you have a day job, if we don't make money in the market, we get paid. And if you make losses, then like my mother would tell me, you are paying to trade.

2) They also have money to play with, so if something doesn't work, they have the money to try something else and eventually something will stick and they get lucky and they profit more to cover their losses just on the principle of limit theorem. For us, if we lose our investment, we won't have any more funds to trade to make back our losses; we are forever stuck with our losses and the conclusion that we are bad traders.
 
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From an article: http://www.lonestocktrader.com/make-money-trading-positive-expectancy/

The truth is that the very best traders out there are right only about 50% of the time or less: William O’Neil, Mark Minervini, Peter Brandt, Bill Lipschultz, Colm O’Shea, Ray Dalio, Bruce Kovner, etc…

Steven Cohen, one of the best stock traders out there who was also features in Stock Market Wizards and is mentoring traders said: “My best trader makes money only 63% of the time. Most traders make money only in the 50% to 55% range. That means you’re going to be wrong a lot. If that’s the case, you better make sure your losses are as small as they can be, and that your winners are bigger.

The Profit/Loss Ratio
If we can’t achieve a consistently high win rate and are doomed to be right about 50% or less of the time, the secret simply is to make more money when you are right, than lose money when you are wrong.

The profit/loss ratio is your average win to your average loss. And if over a sequence of trades, you, on average, make more money than you lose, you make money over time despite being right only 50% of the time. This is how professional traders make money consistently.

And as opposed to the win rate which is outside of your control, you have much more influence over your profit/loss ratio. Indeed, you can control how much you will lose on a trade by using stop losses. You are the one who decide to enter a new position at a certain price following a certain setup and you are the one who decide where to place your stop loss. If like all the successful traders, you keep a neat track record of your trades, you should know your average profit % and average loss %. Based on that, you can easily adjust your stop loss level and type of trades you take, and put yourself in a position to make much more money when you’re right, than lose when wrong.
 
Your better off, with say a 30% win rate, but 1:5 R to R, cause some times losses are going to go 5x's worse than expected, which is then offset by 1 winning trade.
 
From an article: http://www.lonestocktrader.com/make-money-trading-positive-expectancy/

The truth is that the very best traders out there are right only about 50% of the time or less: William O’Neil, Mark Minervini, Peter Brandt, Bill Lipschultz, Colm O’Shea, Ray Dalio, Bruce Kovner, etc…

Steven Cohen, one of the best stock traders out there who was also features in Stock Market Wizards and is mentoring traders said: “My best trader makes money only 63% of the time. Most traders make money only in the 50% to 55% range. That means you’re going to be wrong a lot. If that’s the case, you better make sure your losses are as small as they can be, and that your winners are bigger.

The Profit/Loss Ratio
If we can’t achieve a consistently high win rate and are doomed to be right about 50% or less of the time, the secret simply is to make more money when you are right, than lose money when you are wrong.

The profit/loss ratio is your average win to your average loss. And if over a sequence of trades, you, on average, make more money than you lose, you make money over time despite being right only 50% of the time. This is how professional traders make money consistently.

And as opposed to the win rate which is outside of your control, you have much more influence over your profit/loss ratio. Indeed, you can control how much you will lose on a trade by using stop losses. You are the one who decide to enter a new position at a certain price following a certain setup and you are the one who decide where to place your stop loss. If like all the successful traders, you keep a neat track record of your trades, you should know your average profit % and average loss %. Based on that, you can easily adjust your stop loss level and type of trades you take, and put yourself in a position to make much more money when you’re right, than lose when wrong.

This is what gives the No. 1 Golden Rule of trading: Let your profits run and cut your losses short. I think the difference between traders really comes down to who can let the profit run most frequently and by how much and who can correctly deduce it's a loss and cut it short most often.
 
The only difference between us and them is:
You missed out the most critical factor I think, the risk department is in full swing at a firm. The new trader only has margin calls, or not enough margin to put on the next trade to "protect" him.
 
Win rate has virtually no bearing to a traders profits. You can have a high win rate and still lose a lot of $ - you can have a low win rate and make a lot of $. It's all about risk/trade mgmt.

Many of the best swing traders on an average year will have about 10% of their trades account for their profits. The other trades of smaller winners and losers will scratch each other out.

Well.... for professionals they have access to flow. And, a lot of banks only flow trade instead of prop. With flow trading it should be around 100% because you're front running customer orders. Seriously, the mutual/pension funds don't care as long as they get filled. So what if you raise the 100,000 share order 50 ticks. It doesn't matter.

Inside of bank prop trading it gets more difficult. You've got 20 or so banks colluding to manipulate prices, but you'd be hard pressed to find a job on one of those desks.
The win rate is almost 100%, but they do have losses every once in a while.
"London whale."

At a deposit prop firm, probably 5%-10%
(They do have access to RBH, and most who weren't profitable before trading will not go through the hassle to join.)

With CPM, closer to 2%

As a retail reg-T trader who trades everyday, less than 1%

As a buy and hold investor, probably around 60-70%

Investing for the long term has, barring a few instances, always worked out for mom and pop.
And by the way, tastytrade claimed a win rate of 85+%.
 
And by the way, tastytrade claimed a win rate of 85+%.

I could've been low balling the buy and hold investor, but I'm not backing down on the "day trader," claim. With a long enough time line, the variance on trading strategies employed by regular joe will kill almost all.
 
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