If you start with a spreadbetter it can be in the low hundreds. At 50p per point you could get started that way and never have to put more in! Wishful thinking for a starter, though. The good thing about small accounts is that it makes you stop and think again while waiting for the new money to be credited and it imposes the discipline of low stakes because of low margins.
If you start at 50p per point, you are almost certainly trading with leverage unless you are putting up £10k plus. Why suggest leverage to an inexperienced trader? If it is used, it should be kept at 2:1 tops until you really know what you are doing.
The good thing is that you have to stop while you put more money in? This sounds like an attempt at controlled gambling. If you know what you are doing, you are not jacking away your trading money and therefore do not need to wait while you top up your account.
Discipline is something that comes from you, not something that can be imposed by crutches. If you need imposed discipline, you aren't ready to be an independent trader and should go trade for a firm where you will have a boss who imposes discipline and a risk profile, along with the security of a salary.
Spreadbetting is not "low stakes because of low margins" - it is grossly overleveraged so that you can take positions worth £10k plus with a deposit of £50 and wipe yourself out on a tiny move against your position. Then repeat, over and over.
Unless you know exactly what you are doing and why, not only will you not run up a £50 account into anything substantial, you won't take 50p per point seriously either. It will become a hobby, and you'll keep jacking away a few hundred here and there to re-fund your account in order to continue your hobby.
Spitlink, I see you have been here ten years and have over six thousand posts. I'd appreciate your comments on my post - do you usually give similar advice to those new to trading?
I'm going to start day trading very soon. What's the minimum amount of $ I can invest in? $3000? Also, I know this is a topic discussed frequently but how do you find the exit and entry points? Any help would be appreciated.
Why day trading?
What products will you be trading? (this will affect your minimum funding requirement)
To enter, you buy before the market goes up. To exit, you sell to close when the market is not going to go up any further. Reverse for sells.
Why do you want to start "soon" when you don't appear to have taken a lot of time to research what is a very serious business.
If I told you the vig at the casino or races was less, would you believe me, and would you investigate what this means?