Or may be the markets are in fact efficient; and all the analysis & research that traders / investors do is mental masturbation.
The relationship between an accountant and client is no different than any other client consulting relationship - its confidential or presumed confidential unless you release the consulting or audit firm to publish facts related to your account. Publishing general statistics is not part of most agreements and for many clients would not be acceptable. Look at it this way, you pay the firm to handle your business: marketing their business with your statistics is not acceptable nor is divulging any sort of statistic that includes your business. I dont use the mentioned firm, nor would I. The firms that we use have a strict NDA realtionship on our accounts and if they violated this in any way - unless ordered by the government as part of their service - we would instantly terminate our business with them .....
$80k a year in interest would evaporate into nothing. Imagine using $2mil to generate $50k a year in trading income will do to that account. lol.
well lots of people talk about inflation this inflation that, the truth is $50k interest was good back in the 1980s and its still good now 20 years later. So... $50k interest regardless of inflation, price does not change that much High end jobs - $70k+ Most higher-average jobs still pay out $40-50k low end jobs - $20k
You obviously never handled/had that kind of money but if you did, you would know. You're too young and inexperienced. Many people who thought the same usually end up going back to work 20 years later.
You're right I never handled $2mil before. The max i handled was $500,000. I wish I have $2mil though. Do note that inflation 20 years ago was much more rampant than inflation now. I don't get it. I'm comparing trading with a $2mil account for $50k a year income and keeping the same $2mil in a 4% p.a. account for $80k a year. Is the latter worse even though you earn more and do nothing at the same time? In SE Asia regions a man can easily retire with his family without work at US$2k a mth expenditure. $2mil will upkeep this man for 83 years. The 4% p.a. interests will counter the effects of inflation. Many parts of SE Asia has less than 4% inflation per annual if the CPI is anything to go by.
I read this whole thread. One of the assumptions of many is that one is going to walk into this profession, and with a certain amount of money, make a certain amount of money. I think this reasoning is one of the major reasons why most traders (who approach professional trading) fail. First, yes, its unlikely to make a consistent living off of a low capital base. But when you start trading, I belive its more important to keep your costs low and build your account. If you start with $10k, build it to $100K, while you still work your other job. Guess what that does? First, you pay your bills every month. In my years trading early on, I had many jobs that I worked after market hours paying$22.00 to $35.00 per hour. Yes, I made money hourly. Netting 35 to 50K a year. The second and most important thing BUILDING your account does, is it tells you, with verified certaintly, that you are a good, profitable trader. Two of the things I did was: tutor high school kids in all subjects, and I started a computer and network installation business where I charged $35.00 per hour to setup and maintain computer systems in homes. Actually it does more things. It puts you in the game with a much lower risk. It forces you to focus on method over worrying about paying your bills with your trading money (small at first even when successful). I think the traders that read here and think if they only plop down a large enough capital stake they will make it, are running the wrong direction right out of the gate. That is a proposition that, in my opinion, leads to failure. Its OK to have multiple income streams, and build your trading skill and account equity. Your account equity and its return will tell you when you can become a professional who only trades. The "how much money you need to make a living trading" only becomes a relevant question after you demonstrate that you are a profitable trader. If you are, then its also easy to go get more money, go to a firm that will provide the best leverage, etc, etc. etc. Or, if you are the truly independent trader, you can build your account up to a size that generates the income you are comfy living within. You have to be good (profitable) first. Until you know you are, then you need another source of income. You know you are good when your account grows. Until then, it makes no difference how much money you have to trade. It makes the best risk/reward sense to start trading a method that works and with as little capital as possible. Obviously that means shopping for the best fees and being a smart business person too. But thats what all smart business people do.
100% agfree. somebody with 10k base even with 3-1 leverage will be lukcy to make 70k which is all eaten up with bills. i truely think to make it somebody needs at least a 250k base. one must expect lean times were he needs a cushion of money to survive