Greetings Fellow Traders,
I made my first trade back in 1980.
Back in those days, trading, IMO, was much, much harder.
Here's why:
1) First of all, there was no internet and, therefore, no electronic trading.
You used to have to phone in your orders.
When I first started, I didn't realize that there were many, many (I mean just about everyone) unscrupulous brokers.
These brokers would rip you off bad by front- running your orders. It took me a while to figure out what was going on- that this is how they make their living (and I mean BIG money). I finally figured out that the brokers weren't in it for the commission but rather they were in it for the sole purpose of front running the order flow.
The problem was that if you wanted to trade, you couldn't do anything about it because phoning in an order was the ONLY game in town. I tried, literally, dozens of brokers but they were all front runners, so the amount of money that you had to give up on each trade, BEFORE even putting the trade on, made trading nearly impossible- especially if you had a short term perspective, like I did, and were in and out of the market many times a day.
2) Back in those old days, when you wanted to place a market order,the brokers were legally entitled 3 minutes to give you a price fill (due to some shaky NFA rule- which was designed to protect the brokers). Sometimes the fills were quicker than 3 minutes, most of the times they were not. Can you imagine that? Having to wait up to 3 minutes to get a price report on a market order. The markets always moved fast, so getting delayed for minutes when placing a market order meant that it was nearly impossble to be profitable trading short term.
3) Since there was no internet and personal computers, a trader hardly had any tools available to him which todays traders have. There were no computerized charts, indicators, different time frames, etc.
I, like most traders at the time, subscribed to a weekly chart book which you would get mailed to you every Friday. They would have the prior charts in the book and they would also have room for you to update these charts with a pencil.
Can todays trader fathom that? Now charting is simple to access. Just click and you can get any chart you want; in the old days charting was a major, major hassle.
For all these reasons, until the advent of the internet and electronic trading,short term trading was way, way more difficult. If you were position trading, you were still at a disadvantage but not nearly as bad.
I remember reading Livermore's "Reminisciences...".
When he placed market orders, he would have to wait a long time for a fill n a market order- the brokers were front running him even back in 1901 (he didn't even know it). I guess that game is as old as the sun.
Plus, Livemore, and trader of that time, had hardly any way to accurately chart the market, at least compared to modern traders.
ANY trader who first started trading when they had the internet and electronic trading is a million times better off thann people who started trading in the old days, especially if you make many trades a day.
I wish that I had started trading with the advent of electronic internet trading. I would have saved mucho bucks and much aggravation, for the above reasons.
Are there any traders who started back in the old days who went through the same headaches?
I made my first trade back in 1980.
Back in those days, trading, IMO, was much, much harder.
Here's why:
1) First of all, there was no internet and, therefore, no electronic trading.
You used to have to phone in your orders.
When I first started, I didn't realize that there were many, many (I mean just about everyone) unscrupulous brokers.
These brokers would rip you off bad by front- running your orders. It took me a while to figure out what was going on- that this is how they make their living (and I mean BIG money). I finally figured out that the brokers weren't in it for the commission but rather they were in it for the sole purpose of front running the order flow.
The problem was that if you wanted to trade, you couldn't do anything about it because phoning in an order was the ONLY game in town. I tried, literally, dozens of brokers but they were all front runners, so the amount of money that you had to give up on each trade, BEFORE even putting the trade on, made trading nearly impossible- especially if you had a short term perspective, like I did, and were in and out of the market many times a day.
2) Back in those old days, when you wanted to place a market order,the brokers were legally entitled 3 minutes to give you a price fill (due to some shaky NFA rule- which was designed to protect the brokers). Sometimes the fills were quicker than 3 minutes, most of the times they were not. Can you imagine that? Having to wait up to 3 minutes to get a price report on a market order. The markets always moved fast, so getting delayed for minutes when placing a market order meant that it was nearly impossble to be profitable trading short term.
3) Since there was no internet and personal computers, a trader hardly had any tools available to him which todays traders have. There were no computerized charts, indicators, different time frames, etc.
I, like most traders at the time, subscribed to a weekly chart book which you would get mailed to you every Friday. They would have the prior charts in the book and they would also have room for you to update these charts with a pencil.
Can todays trader fathom that? Now charting is simple to access. Just click and you can get any chart you want; in the old days charting was a major, major hassle.
For all these reasons, until the advent of the internet and electronic trading,short term trading was way, way more difficult. If you were position trading, you were still at a disadvantage but not nearly as bad.
I remember reading Livermore's "Reminisciences...".
When he placed market orders, he would have to wait a long time for a fill n a market order- the brokers were front running him even back in 1901 (he didn't even know it). I guess that game is as old as the sun.
Plus, Livemore, and trader of that time, had hardly any way to accurately chart the market, at least compared to modern traders.
ANY trader who first started trading when they had the internet and electronic trading is a million times better off thann people who started trading in the old days, especially if you make many trades a day.
I wish that I had started trading with the advent of electronic internet trading. I would have saved mucho bucks and much aggravation, for the above reasons.
Are there any traders who started back in the old days who went through the same headaches?