What Keeps People from Beginning a Career in Trading?

By David Adams

There are an adventurous few who plow headlong into trading with the style and grace of a Brahma bull. These are the brave few who neglect to take the time to develop a trading methodology and personal self-discipline to trade effectively. The end result is almost always the same; complete and utter failure. Of course, this group of people seem to trumpet the pitfalls and difficulties of trading to anyone who’ll listen.

I hear stories like this, and similar stories, on a consistent basis. People tell me they knew “so and so” who tried to trade and lost a fortune. It seems everyone knows someone who has lost a considerable amount of money trading in the futures market. Unfortunately, there is a never ending supply of those adventurous few who plow headlong into trading with the style and grace of a Brahma bull. So the story perpetuates itself over and over.

I’d like to take a moment with these frightened souls and explain to them that there is a controlled and methodical technique for profiting in the futures market. You don’t need to charge into the markets like a mad bull.

But for many, the damage has been done and rumor can be much more powerful than fact. The average American is, by nature, averse to excessive risk. Most individuals work hard for their money and don’t care to fritter it away carelessly. As futures traders, and educators of futures traders, this is the problem we face.

Of course, there are risks associated with trading e mini futures contracts, and deliberate money management techniques must be implemented along with very exacting trading technique in order to be successful. In short, it takes discipline and experience to be a successful futures trader. But it can be done.

There are a large number of successful traders in the United States, but they seem to be a quiet bunch and go about their business without fanfare or accolades. These folks are interested in making a great living and, by and large, do so without braggadocio or drawing excessive attention to themselves. Needless to say, there are a few braggarts out there. I always seem to meet them at cocktail parties and endure hours of explanation on their trading technique and the millions they have made in the market. I seem to attract them. I don’t know why, but cats seem to feel the same way about me. I prefer the cats.

The point of this article is to emphasize that well controlled trading is possible and profitable. Individuals who equip themselves with the proper knowledge, training, and mentoring stand a good chance of success. They just don’t know it because they’ve listened to the crowd of mad bulls who charge into the market. I wish it weren’t so, because trading can be such an enjoyable profession and creates a wonderful sense of self satisfaction. I feel that we, as trading educators, have failed to get the word out on responsible and profitable trading. For this reason, trading is perceived as a risky and foolish endeavor; better suited for mad bulls.

My goal is to responsibly educate the public, whether they trade not, that rational individuals make a living trading in the futures market. Whether people choose to trade not is up to them. But I would like for the public to have a more rational view of the trading profession. We are not the greedy Wall Street types, nor are we excessive risk takers. We are a group of people who have learned to control risk and embrace it to our advantage. In short, we need to dispel the notion that futures traders are mad bulls.

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