Quote from Handle123:
Yeah, trading hard to break the nut as often the nut is one's brain, but like all jobs, once you learn it, you just going to get better, you start finding small nuances, how to make that one extra tick in day trading or patience of waiting one more day for a swing trade.
Trading is not like all jobs. It is not even a job. It is unlike all jobs. At best, trading is a zero sum game, one cannot monetize his work and time. If you are making money, I would bet that you have large capital and you hold long enough which makes you an investor.
Trading has some positives, but not what people might think at first. It helps one understand risk and reward at a deeper level. Understand human nature including (others and one's nature).
The greatest benefit is probably if one learns and becomes successful, he may try managing OPM. He would need marketing skills and spend time building his business. Once he does that he has a 2% cut each year (which is a free bond coupon), a free call option on profits, and a free put on losses.
If fund is say 1B, check how much is a 2% bond and ATM leaps call for 20% participation (price ~0.40*Volty/5). The reward is huge on the education one gets if he translates that to a business of managing OPM. I think it is not easy because the success in managing OPM is not essentially to know how to make money, but to have clients for the fund. You need people writing about you in books, in newspapers, invitation to TV, etc. Nothing to do with knowing how to trade.
