What style of trading would you teach your son?

Yeah.

Being a value investor means you become good at determining the viability of a business and being able to discount cashflows. I would want my kids to skew towards owning private enterprises as thats where they can maximize their wealth and have meaning in their careers.
I highly second that. I would even say that knowing the difference between value and price is such a required skill that 90% of traders do not know.

And it doesn't matter if you evaluate a business, the micro price in the orderbook or a synthetic forward rate. If you don't buy below value and sell above value you'll find it pretty difficult to make money.

I didn't have a lot of mentees but the ones I took under my wings always had to start scalping craigslist or eBay. Keep track of offers and sale prices on each platform, calculate fair value including freight and insurance, learn to build a non - correlated portfolio (aka don't flip PS5 and PS4 games), find a niche and be efficient with your cash.

No charts, no machine learning hogwash, no backtesting just common sense. Risk premium and alpha. Learn how to spot it and how to tell the difference.

You don't need to become a milionaire (and you probably won't) but you'll learn what it takes to be a trader AND you'll learn why financial markets are so much better when you are profitable.
When they transitioned from craigslist to derivatives after 3 months it took most of them just 6 month on average to turn a profit
 
nah, my man. You become MM out of necessity or because you have an infrastructure advantage but believe me, making markets is a pig job

if you own the machine, it's the best way to make money. if you are a cog in the machine, it's not an optimal place to be... highly specialized, only a few employers, beholden to the volume and volatility of the market, and always arguing for your value contribution vs the inherent seat value.
 
No question... intraday and short term... self-reliance as long as government regulation "allows". That's part 1.
Part 2 is putting excess to work with a passive bent, akin to a Ramsey investment plan, but not Ramsey's plan.
 
If you had a son who wanted to become a trader (of course after you tried convincing him not to do so, lol) what style of trading would you teach him? I mean besides of all the basics like risk/reward, kelly etc. Would you teach him price action trading? How to look for market inefficiencies (aka arbs), statistical/seasonal trading or slap him with the complexity of options strategies in Destriero and Tony Saliba style? Would you make him a scalper or even a swing trader?
Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT). Although from 1952, and not so “modern,” it requires the investor to understand fundamentals of a spectrum of markets. It earned Markowitz a Nobel prize in Economics. Basically normalization of portfolio returns via diversification across asset classes.

It will expose him to all the major markets, and form a solid basis for specialization into securities of interest.

Have them set up a balanced (paper) MPT portfolio with stocks, bonds, fx, options, futures, foreign stuff, crypto, etc. Have him learn the basics of all these asset classes, and see how it performs.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_portfolio_theory
 
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Day trading is for the poor.
My son is going to be father’s rich.
That’s why I’ll teach him to swing trade the cycles.

I took my father’s thousands to millions.
He will take my millions to billions.

It takes 30min a day
+ Bear holidays
 
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I will teach him just what is trading, stocks, forex and all not teach him how to do it, I will give him little money and let do mistake and correction/ trail and error process so he can build himself his own
 
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