Dear day traders:
If you can earn a return of 30% a year consistently, my understanding is you have talent in this game. However this also depends on your account size. It is obviously easier to make higher returns on smaller accounts. But even if you have a £100,000 account (which is by no means a small amount of money to get your hands on) and earn a return of 30%, you earn £30k which is not big money. Assuming you can earn a return of 30% a year consistently you would need an account of £300k to make anything close to good money.
Can someone with some experience please put some light on the subject for me. Have they slowly built up their accounts or do they show their positive trading history (with small accounts, i.e £10k) to prop houses/banks who will back them with larger amounts.
It seems you don't need money to make money but need a lot of money to make money.
I am assuming that investors are risking a small proportion per trade, 1-2% max.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Johnny.
If you can earn a return of 30% a year consistently, my understanding is you have talent in this game. However this also depends on your account size. It is obviously easier to make higher returns on smaller accounts. But even if you have a £100,000 account (which is by no means a small amount of money to get your hands on) and earn a return of 30%, you earn £30k which is not big money. Assuming you can earn a return of 30% a year consistently you would need an account of £300k to make anything close to good money.
Can someone with some experience please put some light on the subject for me. Have they slowly built up their accounts or do they show their positive trading history (with small accounts, i.e £10k) to prop houses/banks who will back them with larger amounts.
It seems you don't need money to make money but need a lot of money to make money.
I am assuming that investors are risking a small proportion per trade, 1-2% max.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Johnny.