prawn_86
Mod: Call me Dendrobranchiata
- Joined
- 23 May 2007
- Posts
- 6,637
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- 7
Ha.. you mean all those clever fund managers that were buying Allco and B&B all the way down to the bottom?
http://blog.sharefinder.com.au/index.php/2009/02/04/taking-responsibility-for-your-investmen
I agree with TH here. If your sole aim is to make enough money to match your wage or even to only slightly increase it you will find it difficult to succeed and imo you are better off working for wages. You would only need 1 bad month and you could be in trouble, let alone trying to grow your capital.
If coming off a fairly low wage base say 35-50k pa I think you would have to be able to earn at least 3x that amount trading to make it a worthwhile and having the capital to do this and be able to cover a few bad months is a problem for most. Running any sort of business (trading included) has a lot of hidden costs and problems.
# I could have easily just traded the aussie200 from 4pm to 4:30 and made a living off that
My end goal is to be a full time day trader.
Do you have to daytrade to trade fulltime?
I don't sit there and watch it, Aussiest!Aww Julia, that's awesome! My problem is i don't hold for long enough.
Julia, how do you get the patience to wait for those larger moves? Do you have a hobby that you indulge in?
Exactly right. I was well in the red up until the rally this week.i see no ones mentioned the weeks that go by when one takes loss after loss yet ........
Thats great, but its not my sole aim. My sole aim is to trade well, which in turn will bring profits, isn't that what everyones "sole aim" is?
I'm still working my normal job, and not quitting anytime soon to jump into trading for a living, its one of those things...what are they called again...oh yeah, goals. no one who begins trading is instantly going to make their weekly wage. I see nothing wrong in having a few goals, to try and reach consistent trading.
If you can make 20% pa year in year out that would put you in the league of buffett, soros etc. Doing it with 2 - 3 hours per week would make you infinitely beter than them. Think about it...
Admittedly there are a lot of fund managers that dont perform well, but there are others that do.
You are essentuially saying you want to match it with the best of the best, but only commit a couple hours a week. Please let me know if you ever manage to do this
Thats great, but its not my sole aim. My sole aim is to trade well, which in turn will bring profits, isn't that what everyones "sole aim" is?
I'm still working my normal job, and not quitting anytime soon to jump into trading for a living, its one of those things...what are they called again...oh yeah, goals. no one who begins trading is instantly going to make their weekly wage. I see nothing wrong in having a few goals, to try and reach consistent trading.
lol Sam relax. I'm not saying you're going to do anything or that you shouldn't have your goals for trading, all I'm saying is you might need to shift the goal posts a bit, earning what you're earning now might not be enough if you are trading fulltime.
There are other things to think about - Holidays (no income while on holidays), getting sick/injured and not being able to trade, a bad couple of weeks/months with negative returns, having money put aside for tax, trying to grow capital, general business expenses etc, etc.
I also don't get that question 'Do you have to daytrade to trade full time?'
You would have to define daytrade and full time first.
By daytrade I mean short term trading, not holding overnight etc etc - standard definition of daytrading I would have thought.
Friends that are not on the internet! Man, that's sooo 80's!# You can turn into a bit of a social recluse (your friends are people on forums that you have never met).
Hold up son, I said 2-3 hours a DAY.
You do realise that there are hundreds (if not thousands) of fund managers (and private investors) out there who do this 40+ hours a week and cannot even get these sort of returns?
I think you are deluding yourself.
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.
Seems to me by its nature, if you need to pull ~$10K a month out you need to spend a lot of time at the screen.
The reason why I need to a lot of capital to make enough to earn a living, is that most of my trading is derived from scalping/arbitrage.
When you are scalping you are only going to make a very small percentage gain. Half my trades are within 0 to 1% and the rest Id be happy for up to 3%.
So If I only had 10k and made 5% for the week with approx 200 trades, thats only a profit of $500. Hardly enough to quit my full time job and rely on it as my sole income. What if I dont make any money at all that week, or loose 500. Im screwed.
Whereas If I had 100k, with the same 200 trades earning 5% for the week, I would have made 5k. Now I can comfortably quit my full time job. At the same time I could also loose 5k, but with 95k still left over, I wouldnt need to keep my eye on seek.com.au just in case.
What's your point? To suggest that it's hard to make a career out of 10-20k? Sure. 50k? I consider that very adequate. 10-20k can get it done if we don't have to worry about paying bills (i.e. you have plenty saved for expenses, partner paying bills etc).
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