zupcon
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Sounds like a very good way of dealing with one or two people on this thread, although I'd substitute a plastic bag.
Hard but fair.
Sounds like a very good way of dealing with one or two people on this thread, although I'd substitute a plastic bag.
My position is that you can throw the same high-quality, relatively narrowly focused (trading, medicine, architecture, law, engineering) education at any random subset of humanity and the distribution of capability within that group at the end of the process will be fairly similar. And it wont be your beloved Bell curve. There will be an incredibly small minority that are excellent. A small, but slightly larger group that aren’t too bad. (There’s no such thing as average in the hard skill professions. You don’t get an average surgeon or doctor or architect. They’re either good to excellent – or struck off – the process handles things this way - mostly). And the vast majority at the smelly end of the stick – poor to awful.So would you say that great traders are born .... not made?
Both.Do people with the right aforementioned attributes discover their abilities over time, or would you say that the skill is apparent from the get go?
If my comments alone put you off I’ve saved you from having to face that 10th loser in a row and finding out if you have what it takes. If you’re easily put of by another’s opinions or words then you’ll definitely unlikely to make the grade.As a struggling trader still searching for consistency, I find your comments a bit disheartening
BIf for example I employed someone and gave him a set of exact instructions and he traded according to what I told him, providing what i told him worked then you have a successful trader.
Bramble you make some excellent points, but to imply traders are born and cannot be taught is not neccessarily true. If for example I employed someone and gave him a set of exact instructions and he traded according to what I told him, providing what i told him worked then you have a successful trader. In principle i could teach anyone of average iq to trade inside bars for example, add in a few other basic parameters etc and there we go. If he knew nothing of the markets value or what each point meant then he would have no fears or beliefs other than a set of instructions which pays his wages.
Every man and his dog think they can trade.
Not sure why.
Trading doesn’t appear to put up the same psychological or physical barriers to commencement let alone unfounded expectations of imminent and total success as do other disciplines where large amounts of money are made. The commonsense that says you don’t make large amounts of money without special skills and hard work (and luck) and an inherent ability and aptitude seem to be missing.
...and providing he carried on doing exctly what you told him to do....and providing YOU knew exactly what is was you did even though some of it you may not know you know...and....If for example I employed someone and gave him a set of exact instructions and he traded according to what I told him, providing what i told him worked ...
Hi i think you must have a good sytem there coz at thos percentages you should be happy.I would like to knoiw more about this system if you care to share it with me that is🙂 give me shout.
cheers
Bigsy
QED.Hi i think you must have a good sytem there coz at thos percentages you should be happy.I would like to knoiw more about this system if you care to share it with me that is🙂 give me shout.
cheers
Bigsy
Most TRADERS in the City know naff all, and most of the analysts too. What most traders do is follow the price and when it's going down sell it etc.
No myths no alchemey nothing like that.
So how they are more capable of commenting/teaching just becasue they push around £50m rather than a home traders £50k I don't know.
I disagree with this. People forget that trading goes much deper than simply price goes up, price goes down on a ladder. (I appreciate that this is the case in P&L terms but you forget the subtlties)
Take for example the treasury trader who looks at hedging cash flow. He may indeed lose on one or many of his positions but if he is trading against cash flows then overall he may win. There are the finer subtleties such as getting a trade on for better than value or managing the hedge on the trade that can never be taught. Things like timing/entry points. These things can not be taught. On a day trading basis your candles may be fine to job into and out of but trading runs much, much deeper than this.
I disagree with this. People forget that trading goes much deper than simply price goes up, price goes down on a ladder. (I appreciate that this is the case in P&L terms but you forget the subtlties)
Take for example the treasury trader who looks at hedging cash flow. He may indeed lose on one or many of his positions but if he is trading against cash flows then overall he may win. There are the finer subtleties such as getting a trade on for better than value or managing the hedge on the trade that can never be taught. Things like timing/entry points. These things can not be taught. On a day trading basis your candles may be fine to job into and out of but trading runs much, much deeper than this.
Expanding my thoughts-I think that certain things can, of course, be taught but there are skills which very successful traders possess that one simply has or does not have. I can think of one particular example whom I am not willing to name who excels at risk management-his decision making and timing are so decisive it is frightening.