8 Reasons Not to
Day trade
Everyone wants to be a daytrader. Let me tell you the best days. You get in
at 9:25am. You make the trade your system tells you to make at 9:30. And by
9:45, the trade is done, profitable, and you’re done for the day: $1800 richer
and happy about it. Even better are those stories of people who took $3000 off
of their credit card and “18 months later I had $25,351,011.45 in the bank!!!”
The first day I decided I was going to be a fulltime daytrader, on May 18,
2001, I was so excited I couldn’t sleep at night. It was unbelievable to me how
much money I was going to make.
But its all a lie to yourself. I still
occasionally daytrade. And I’ve daytraded for other people. I’ve daytraded for
hedge funds and for prop trading firms. Right before I started daytrading, an
old-timer who had spent 40 years in the business told me, “Don’t do it. Why do
you want to be involved with those people.” But I wanted to be “those people”.
I was one of them. I was a TRADER.
Don’t do it: Here’s why:
- Suicide. At some point you will feel suicidal. That doesn’t mean
you lost all of your money. You might just be hav ing your worst week in 2 or 3
weeks. But for whatever reason you bought when you should’ve sold and that sent
your head spinning and now you need to be talked off the ledge. I’ve talked
many people off the ledge in the past 10 years and had to be talked off a few
times myself. Its not a pleasant feeling. Why do that to yourself?
- You’ll overeat. Why not? You just put on the trade and the second
you did it went against you. So you put on more and it went against you some
more. So now you are staring at it and you are feeling bad. Your body needs to
feel good. Your body is very short-term in its thinking. Its saying, “you did
something that made me feel bad so now I need a doughnut. I know that will
balance the bad feeling so go d o it. Hurry.” So you eat a doughnut. The trade
goes against you more. Screw it, you eat 5 more doughnuts. Six. Seven. I’m
getting sick even writing this. Eight. Nine. And so on.
- Your eyes go bad. Imagine you have two screens in front of you and
thousands of numbers and they are all blinking and changing from green to red
to green. You’re staring at these numbers for thousands of hours over the
course of years. I can’t read books close to me anymore. The letters all melt
together and look like a kaleidoscope. I have to take my glasses off to read
them. Although, is that so bad? Maybe I won’t need glasses anymore eventually.
- Social life. Do you really think that losing $500,000 of your
client’s money in a day is going to make you a happy, chipper person when you
go out with your friends that night. One person told me, “play with your kids.
Kids always make you happy.” What the hell? Do I really want to listen to a
four year old jabber about something when I’ve got money on the line? Forget
it.
- Blood pressure. When I have a trade go against me, I can sit there
and feel the blood pumping through my entire body. I can feel my heartbeat.
That might seem like a superpower but it isn’t. If you hear every single pul se
going all through your body then something very bad is happening.
- Nothing productive. My biggest regret in life is the hours I spent
watching trades when I could’ve been making a website business or starting some
other kind of business that could’ve actually been helpful to people. Like a
doughnut store. Who am I helping by trying to snatch a few thousand dollars out
of the market every day? If anything, its like I’m trying to pick someone’s
pocket – the unfortunate, overeating, suicidal, bastard on the other side of my
trade.
- No career. When you sit there and trade every day you’re not
networking with friends or other professionals. You’re not learning anything
new about the world or business. Every second you sit there watching a trade
you are removing yourself further and further from any notion of a career since
daytrading is not a career. You are closer to being an inmate in a mental
institution and not a functioning member of society that your kids can be proud
of.
- Its impossible. I know some very good daytraders. In the long run
it is possible to make money daytrading. But it’s hard and it takes years to
build the psychology. Every good daytrader I know suffers from all of the
above. You have to be ext remely humble, have no delusions of grandeur when it
comes to your market opinions, take losses as quickly as possible, and not get
discouraged. Alas, in the long run, I have none of these qualities. And neither
do you.
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