platypus_8888 said:I think the important thing is to watch for a while and see what you are getting involved with. Work out a plan and then test it for a while.
Then risk your money in increasing amounts as you win.
I don't know exactly what you have done but it sounds like you have not done that.
No thats not true at all, my approach was measured and infact diligent in comparison, and Im surprised at your comment...
Correct money management tends to dictate that the stake in a trade should remain constant irrespective of your wins and losses and should only change with a change in your strategy (your overall approach) not a change in the tactics ( your individual trades). Your suggested approach is how people wipe out their account quickly. However add to this that spreadbetting is NOT trading.. it is gambling because the company can and does "dope the horse" at will.
Also no amount of watching will allow you to realise how easily stopped out of trades you may be, or how you can be locked out of amending your stop loss, or how bad the graphs are at imparting volatility of a given market, let alone the erroneous incongruence with the actual market or how you can be denied access to the market at the open by a few minutes to restrict your profits, or how often the message "this market is not dealable" comes up when you want to place a trade on a surefire move...want me to continue?...
Go ahead gamble with IG as long as you know in the long term the odds are against you, just be aware you are at the Casino surrounded by one arm bandits (binaries and bracket bets) and roulette wheels pretending to be real Market indexes like FTSE or Dow Jones but are infact tampered with a. to entice your bet and b. to reduce your chance of winning once you place your bet. and at £25 a point betting daily (as if day trading perhaps) I assure you with those spreads you arnt making money regularly faster than you are loosing it.