As a newb i'm wondering the same question.
What tactics would someone who's only looking to trade, at most, once a week, take?
Just another source of income. Like a partner.
My secret (ha!) is twofold:
1. A large capital base. I look to make a return on my capital and compound it over the longer term using a variety of mainly trend following techniques. nothing special with these - just taking a longer term approach to their application.
2. Running a business on the side as a hedge for the tough times when they come along. A friend I play golf with suicided about a month ago, not because he had lost a great deal of money, but because he couldn't make ends meet from his trading. He had placed so much pressure on himself and his family that he opted for the life insurance option rather than loss of face of getting a job.
My advice to people wanting to be successful at this game is to keep your day job, learn to trade using a simple yet robust trend following approach and remain patient. The foundations of this concept are simple to grasp, however its human emotion - lack of patience, tenacity, discipline etc, is where most (the 95%?) fail.
Nick
FWIW:
Delta Neutral option strategies go a long way to filling the bill. (with caveats)
Yep, good decision. Options do require a time commitment to learn.Unfortunately options is one thing I haven't really had a chance to study but is next on the list but until I have the time to study them properly it will have wait.
Agree. I pull a living in this way. e.g. if you have, say, 2000 MQG and it moves around $4 over a few days, that's $8000.Yes, i think you can. You'd have to hold for more than a few days though and pick your entries and exits well. For example, if you had have bought LEI late last week for 21.47, you could have sold today at 24.50. BHP also got down to around 32, it has opened today > 35. I think you would have to have a larger capital base, something in the vicinity of 150k+ as you'd be buying 1k units+ of a few selected stocks.
I would ask the question who actually makes a fulltime living out of trading. Very hard gig on a small capital base. You have to realise that every week you pay yourself is a drag on performance. Like another bad trade. Probably contributes to failure more than lack of trading ability.
My advice to people wanting to be successful at this game is to keep your day job, learn to trade using a simple yet robust trend following approach and remain patient.
Agree. I pull a living in this way. e.g. if you have, say, 2000 MQG and it moves around $4 over a few days, that's $8000.
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