Fl3tch3rb0y
Junior member
- Messages
- 23
- Likes
- 3
:clap:
Superb!
Superb!
@voodoo1
I Agree with most everything you have said. My trading spans two and a half decades.
Now this next statement is probably gonna generate a few heated replies however I am gonna say it anyway because I think I've earned the right to...
I don't personally find trading hard! Being disciplined is hard but then be disciplined and trading is simple. The execution is certainly not hard and opening an account now-a-days is not a problem. I understand the point you make but for me, yes, the first ten years or so were not hard but actually sheer hell until slowly things started to get a little better. I'll rephrase that: I was becoming a little less dumb....Then a wake up call and now-a-days boy am I disciplined and boy do I understand all too painfully well some of the absolute must do's and the definitely don't do's...The point I make is this: I think we can read all we like but at the end of the day only a few people will get it and the rest will only think they get it. I'll give you an example - I know for a fact that early on I would read something simple like say some hard and fast rule like the 3% or 5% account rule and it would make absolute and complete sense whilst I was reading it, until I started trading a few positions and maybe they turned sour. I thought I knew better! - I can guarantee that 90% of T2W members will break simple rules like money management or maybe some other common sense rule, maybe they'll move their stop and chase a loser, or maybe they won't capitalize and pyramid when they should and when the risk is 'correct' . Whatever it might be there are some key rules and common themes which crop up in different books and articles time and time again and they are absolutely not to be ignored if you want to trade successfully. Discipline!
Originally Posted by 300 View Post
"My name which is not that common , can move a share price in London or New York just by the fact that I am a buyer or seller."
That's one of the best things to come about the internet, people can go online and do some research about a product/author and get some sort of balanced view before committing their hard earned cash.
You couldnt be more wrong. The view is anything but balanced.
On one hand, you have positive reviews that are generally written by the company. A great deal of marketing effort goes into the creation of false testimonials. So those reviews cant be trusted. Then you have the affiliate marketers posting positive reviews of the products they are selling.
On the other hand, you have negative views, usually posted by people with wildly unrealistic expectations, who didnt make a million overnight, and feel they've been ripped off.
Then you have reviews from people whose objective is to stick the boot into vendors. Then you have reviews from lulzers.
To make matters worse, the website or forum on which a review is posted generally have their own commercial adgenda, which generally translates to turning a blind eye to spamming good reviews, and deleting bad reviews when in reciept of advertising revenue, and the opposite when they are not.
The only people not posting reviews, are those who took a course, and have a fairly balanced view !
http://www.free-easy-money.com/bettingtutorial.php
@The Leopard
DON'T understand what you mean by your post...?
Surely nothing to do with post counts...:cheesy:
I see you just joined last month...And your not far off 200 posts...WOW:whistling
You couldnt be more wrong. The view is anything but balanced.
On one hand, you have positive reviews that are generally written by the company. A great deal of marketing effort goes into the creation of false testimonials. So those reviews cant be trusted. Then you have the affiliate marketers posting positive reviews of the products they are selling.
On the other hand, you have negative views, usually posted by people with wildly unrealistic expectations, who didnt make a million overnight, and feel they've been ripped off.
Then you have reviews from people whose objective is to stick the boot into vendors. Then you have reviews from lulzers.
To make matters worse, the website or forum on which a review is posted generally have their own commercial adgenda, which generally translates to turning a blind eye to spamming good reviews, and deleting bad reviews when in reciept of advertising revenue, and the opposite when they are not.
The only people not posting reviews, are those who took a course, and have a fairly balanced view !
MAKING MONEY FROM FINANCIAL BETTING (managed)
Quantity: 10,086
Base Price: £150.00
Formerly known as "Financial Success Book & Course Buyers", this file contains buyers of a Financial Spread Betting/Spread Trading course. Each customer has spent between £97.00 -£347.00 on an initial training course. Customers have then gone on to live training courses with an average spend of £2,000. Around 30% of this list also subscribe to a monthly financial newsletter at an average price of £99.00 a month.
The Leopard has far more then 200 posts. He is a multi-nic no doubt.@The Leopard
DON'T understand what you mean by your post...?
Surely nothing to do with post counts...:cheesy:
I see you just joined last month...And your not far off 200 posts...WOW:whistling
this is a scam.
brad34 has to be vince himself.
A total newbie comes to this forum and posts as a master on vincy..may be he will claim he has done a PHD on this /QUOTE]
No I am not Vince but I did get sucked in some years ago and attended one of his seminars in Milton Keynes. Why did I attend? Because I believed the hype! Would I ever attend another no!
The point I was making however is what Vince does, is put together packages that people can relate to especially if they are new to trading and know nothing about it. What he offers is a short cut to understanding different products like spread betting, financial fixed odds etc and the different markets that can be traded. Of course 95% of the info he provides could in most cases be found for free or in much cheaper books if newbies know where to look! The point is though many people want to save time and like the idea of being taught in a seminar environment hence why he tends to get people attending.
Hi All, Has anyone considering subscribing to the service spreadbetguru dot com?
Its a brilliant service, I have been using it and I can tell you it generates money everyday.
The guru is an ex local who used to trade Bund and Bobl outrights, but now trades the dow due to its volatility. He says trading is all psychologiy. By keeping stops low and profit exits higher, its possible to be successful, but the person has to have the confidence of getting into the trades.
I am using the simulator for now but can say that spreadbetguru dot com is a good system...and its all for £50 per month....you can even speak to him and get more of an insight into markets etc...this service seems like one of the best I have seen...and for once its from someone who really trades the markets and makes money from the markets...he seems like somoene who just wants to help....Im done with education manuals costing hundreds of pounds and all these training workshops that don't teach me a thing...and cost me like £500..... the site is called spreadbetguru dot com definately worth trying a free subscription on to start with to see how good it is