That's one mofo pillow. The point is that $250 in styrofoam is worthless to me, as are these monotonic and droning videos from a guy who can't trade.
Spray paint them gold and dump them on some mook. Even if Al really traded anyone that can't articulate themselves better is suspect. The more obtuse the easier it is to hedge their words.
Have you read the book? I haven't myself as I haven't been a big reader of trading materials in a long time but I'm curious as to your knowledge on his book, considering you are anti-TA. So when did you read his book?
Did you or any of the people you mentioned put in at least the same amount of time into trading as they did to become pros in their own lines of business? I am talking 6-10 years. I hear this all the time. A doctor tries trading and fails. An engineer (maybe even a scientist!) tries trading and fails. the common logic here is that "if I could work hard enough to make a lawyer, I can work hard enough to make a trader." What a sham. All these professions have two common aspects: determinism and paycheck. One can go to college, get a B.S. and then an M.S. (that's 6-8 years) and then "become" an engineer. What does that prove exactly? That this person has great work ethics? Please. All that proves that one spent enough time to study a set of subjects, pass exams, a few interviews and is now going to get a steady paycheck for doing something that is well-defined and concrete. While I won't claim that it's easy, having done all that I would say that most people have the necessary wherewithal, even if some require a firm kick in the ass. Besides, all of them know that once they get a job they will get paid. Now, pit these people against the best and the brightest, have them do something that is almost entirely non-deterministic, only pay them when they win and take their money away when they lose and what happens? "Snap back to reality, Oh there goes gravity." -Eminem They fall, they bleed and then they complain that they didn't meet the right mentor, were somehow mislead and that the market is rigged. The reality is, trading requires an entirely different kind of effort, different attitude and mental readiness not experienced by most of these people. This is why I call trading a martial art. Martial art can be mastered. It's hard. Damn fucking hard. Most don't have THE WORK ETHIC required in order to do it. /Wulfrede
LOL, wow, you are way off base. Do you even realize how difficult the course work is to become an engineer? Have you ever thought about why prop trading firms hire from the science fields (engineering, math, physics). These highly successful trading firms only look to hire people with backgrounds that you say... please! are you sure you even know what you're talking about? do you even trade? you do realize this firm is packed full of these people that you say have no work ethic. http://www.sig.com/
Explaining a setup(s), discretionary or not, does not take 25 hours in delta1 products. If it does then the GOAL is to obfuscate.
i swear that is all he really does. he says time and time again he only likes 'high probability' trades because he does not like to lose. fine, where are they? he cannot tell us what a high probability trade looks like. he just cant do it.