Where are the TRUE Prop Trading firms?

Prop firms is mostly daytrading.

daytrading futures is same as daytrading stocks.


Quote from ElecEquity:

1st - your info on maximum daily loss of $100 is incredibly wrong (maybe not for new traders)
2nd - all trading isn't HFT
3rd - he can't trade actively (not in stocks) w/only $5k...ever heard of PDT?
 
Quote from bulllives:

Schonfeld fired most of his traders and Chimera I believe no longer exists. and now the SEC is giving all the shady sub account firms registered with the CBOE a new license exam so they can collect some fees.

Actually, Schonfeld let go of 15% of its staff, according to this article:

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-07-06/schonfeld-to-fire-50-traders-as-speed-curbs-profits.html

Chimera is still around, and is one of the few "true prop" trading firms:

http://www.chimerasecurities.com

You're right about the new exam, tentatively called the Series 56, which applies to CBOE prop firms, "shady" or not.

http://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/cboe/2010/34-63314.pdf
 
Prop, 20 yeas ago and on, used to mean you got staked 100% after digging ditches as a runner or a clerk at an exchange and showing promise, or by whatever other relationship you could extablish. That was a mono on mono, don't care about your pedigree, make me money, time.

The whole subject needs to be put in context over time to come to a defination as to what it means today. SAC used to stake guys with nothing more than a reference and a one strike and you are out gig.

It is a broad subject and very misunderstood.


Quote from RewriteQuran:

I think all Hedge Funds are TRUE Prop Trading firms
 
Quote from RewriteQuran:

I think all Hedge Funds are TRUE Prop Trading firms

Great way of thinking about it. The traditional Chicago Prop business model involves day-trading derivatives and the trader being both staked 100% and also having a draw salary.
 
Quote from bone:

Great way of thinking about it. The traditional Chicago Prop business model involves day-trading derivatives and the trader being both staked 100% and also having a draw salary.

Agreed. However, even for the equity prop business model that stake the traders 100% and pay a salary/draw, if they are a CBSX member, then they're regulated by their SRO, so I guess they can't really be called a "hedge fund" in the traditional sense.
 
Quote from ElecEquity:

1st - your info on maximum daily loss of $100 is incredibly wrong (maybe not for new traders)
2nd - all trading isn't HFT
3rd - he can't trade actively (not in stocks) w/only $5k...ever heard of PDT?

Agreed.
 
Quote from Lucias:

You ask, you receive

Kershner
Chimera
First New York
Title (not for US, not to same level as others)
Schonfield

That's the only post so far that is really useful. Thanks Lucias
 
But seriously, why bother going "true" prop if you are already successful? Besides 50% of your profits, what else do you need to give away for such a deal? A firm covering your losses is not worth much at all -- you're consistently profitble, correct?. A salary? Same thing.

Sure I can see if one traded very liquid markets and got immediate access to 10x more capital to trade, a firm would be able to sell a deal and take advantage of a trader just starting to turn the corner. But for seasoned profitable traders, all the leverage for larger markets could easily be found in futures/derivatives markets, correct?
 
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