Life after Proprietary Trading?

Discussion in 'Professional Trading' started by ethanbrooke, Oct 13, 2001.

  1. you know, i don't mind if people leave trading to go to B school. It's like a vacation. I hope they enjoy themselves. I've never been on for the life of leisure.
     
    #61     May 30, 2002
  2. Goldenarm.... What's bullshit? Making $500,000 a year from daytrading? If you think that making $500,000 a yewar from daytrading....you must be working at Alltech and giving away all your pforfits to Harry. Trust me: $500,000 a year from daytrading is very possible.... even today. Top guys at my firm - Wordlco in NYC - clear over $2M a year for themselves.
     
    #62     May 30, 2002
  3. skynet

    skynet

    who is your firm's number one trader (first name should be ok) how much has made this year?
     
    #63     May 31, 2002
  4. skynet

    skynet

    i wonder how those those traders (that made millions in late 990s and 2000) are doing now a days.
     
    #64     May 31, 2002
  5. drdr

    drdr

    No life :mad: :mad: :mad:
     
    #65     May 31, 2002
  6. most either blew up or quit trading since they started loosing $
     
    #66     May 31, 2002
  7. To make $1 million in a year, you have to clear an average of $4,000 a day (assuming they trade virtually every trading day, and any down day means one must clear $8,000 + the amount lost the following day in order to average $4,000 for those 2 days). And that assumes that you receive 100% of payout (either trade at home with big leverage or have great payout at prop firm, which isn't 100% anyhow. Many people made $1 million in the good days. The number of people making $1,000 now is extremely, extremely small (hell, so is the number of people making $500,000 this year). To make $2 million, one has to AVERAGE $8,000 a day. Only a handful of daytraders/swing traders in this country probably make that much. The "irrational exuberance" is over, and now its time to work for every dollar. The days where the bull market made everyone look like geniuses is over. That's just my humble opinion, but what do I know. After all, I Missed the Boat (the bull market).
     
    #67     May 31, 2002
  8. skynet

    skynet

    to at least see the worst of markets...personally ithink that one must endure pain before the goodies. Its better to learn the hard way than to learn the easy way (in the bull market) that way your ego doesnt get in your way.
     
    #68     May 31, 2002
  9. i've heard of traders in the seventies just crying, breaking down, because of the way the markets are. I've been close to tears a few times myself. Thank God markets DO change.
     
    #69     May 31, 2002
  10. skynet

    skynet

    crying is the outcome for frustration.
     
    #70     May 31, 2002