Not sure what your problem is or if you have some sort of vendetta against me. Please take our toxicity elsewhere.
It's normal, these people have no prospect of being profitable and will work until they die trying to take you with them, their advice will cost you more than $2k, the closest you can get without either access to a strategy that works (which you generally will not find outside of institutional unless they are signals and even then cost you towards $1k/mth) or creating a strategy yourself is Elliott Wave, it's not the solution but it will get you further than 80% of everyone else 80% faster, eSignal have it built in and also have live mentoring as part of the package. I actually used that platform with Elliott Wave to help a hedge fund during Brexit to time the 1.40s collapse, you could even see one hour before the vote came it that Brexit was done, we put it on Twitter (for Accredited investors) before the event to show that you can time the markets, the same happened with the Trump win, fascinating to be part of. It takes 10,000 hours to learn trading but you need to make peace with your life, 5stages of grief where no one exits denial hence their trading fails, the markets are designed to make you lose via something called a double-bind (classic martingale), every trade must come to you, if you go to it your profit evaporates and eventually your capital, given everyone generates their 'power-play' and 'fractional income' via double-binding the next person, your goal is to avoid it and with enough skills mitigate it should you get caught in one (the truly masterful can induce a feedback loop), with Elliott Waves softening the process, that is where your 10,000 hours goes, always remembering - no one wants you knowing this because it weakens the bind
Asked once before - @alistera - and am trying now again, do you have any charts showing this or something similar?
When you become an accredited investor and understand MiFID who knows what can happen, but you really should be specific in your questions, what you are asking about is "your" 'different levels of information' - I posted retail trades some weeks ago, but that's the funny thing about retail, they have very short memories. "One of the key aspects of MiFID is the classification of clients into specific client types. There are three types of client types: professional clients, retail clients, and eligible counterparties. The goal for the classifications is that the regulatory protection for the clients should reflect the different levels of risks for each client type. The idea is that different types of clients, or investors, will have different levels of financial knowledge, and so should be given different levels of protection when dealing with a financial body, such as a bank. Eligible counterparties are provided the least protection and retail clients are provided the highest. Depending on the client type, the client is provided with different levels of information, which are necessary for their understanding of the specific risks of a transaction as well as the overall explanations and details of that transaction."