Changed careers & time-to-time progress (if any)
I've been working at a major US brokerage company as a techie for longer than I'd like to admit, but I'm now transitioning to become a trader. I have gone through the rounds of buying books, courses, etc which I've studied carefully and I've demo-daytraded the YM and stock gappers with good results (but too short a trading history to declare conclusively profitable in the long run). Also I've been moderately profitable on live swing trades, so I'm a little better than a rookie.
Originally I was going to daytrade with my own account for great work/life balance, but I grew a yellow tail and will join a trading desk as a trader. The setup seems to be similar to an arcade, but it's not exactly because the desk itself is an LLC and they provide insurance after 90 days. Also there are a few options for leverage: No personal risk:keep 60% of profits. (I was not offered this option). $5000 buffer account:keep 90%. $10000:keep 95%. Also the hours 8:30am-6:30pm are a bit long, which conflicts with my original ideas for work:life balance. Plus other guidelines include needing to stay with the desk for 120 days or else pay a penalty, paying for own trading toys (e-Signal, etc)...
Is this some kind of hybrid arcade? I'm a bit confused about how to classify what this is -- I'm really trying to avoid it being a job, and would rather think of it as making the firm work for me via leverage.
I don't like the fact that I have to put money upfront to buffer the firm's risk, but at least I'll be in an environment for at least 120 days learning how some of the successful traders succeed and practice discipline. I was thinking that after I've had enough experience (could be months or could be years), I could negotiate the contract hours or revert back to my original trading from home plan.
I think they didn't really quiz me on the interview because they saw that I went to a top college. I'm still kicking myself all these years for never having taken advantage of the fact that I did!
Does my course of action sound ok? If not, what would you do?
I've been working at a major US brokerage company as a techie for longer than I'd like to admit, but I'm now transitioning to become a trader. I have gone through the rounds of buying books, courses, etc which I've studied carefully and I've demo-daytraded the YM and stock gappers with good results (but too short a trading history to declare conclusively profitable in the long run). Also I've been moderately profitable on live swing trades, so I'm a little better than a rookie.
Originally I was going to daytrade with my own account for great work/life balance, but I grew a yellow tail and will join a trading desk as a trader. The setup seems to be similar to an arcade, but it's not exactly because the desk itself is an LLC and they provide insurance after 90 days. Also there are a few options for leverage: No personal risk:keep 60% of profits. (I was not offered this option). $5000 buffer account:keep 90%. $10000:keep 95%. Also the hours 8:30am-6:30pm are a bit long, which conflicts with my original ideas for work:life balance. Plus other guidelines include needing to stay with the desk for 120 days or else pay a penalty, paying for own trading toys (e-Signal, etc)...
Is this some kind of hybrid arcade? I'm a bit confused about how to classify what this is -- I'm really trying to avoid it being a job, and would rather think of it as making the firm work for me via leverage.
I don't like the fact that I have to put money upfront to buffer the firm's risk, but at least I'll be in an environment for at least 120 days learning how some of the successful traders succeed and practice discipline. I was thinking that after I've had enough experience (could be months or could be years), I could negotiate the contract hours or revert back to my original trading from home plan.
I think they didn't really quiz me on the interview because they saw that I went to a top college. I'm still kicking myself all these years for never having taken advantage of the fact that I did!
Does my course of action sound ok? If not, what would you do?
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