The Plight of the Plucky Day Trader
How much money is funneled through the New York Stock Exchange on any given day? The rough approximation puts the figure at $1 billion. The humble NASDAQ, by comparison, manages to reallocate approximately $50 million worth of stocks and bonds. Mind you, these are daily tallies. So, indeed, if a tidy sum is your chief aim in life, your course is set.
Since the mid-1990s, the financial sector has divided into two co-existing, yet antagonistic, camps. The first camp is populated by reams of business and finance majors, who went to university in the hopes of transforming themselves into diminutive versions of Gordon Grekko. Most of them are one bad year away from opting for an MBA program and them settling into some form of middle to upper management position at some firm, somewhere.
The second camp consists of the plucky day trader on his or her quixotic quest for El Dorado. Your average day trader has attended — and in most cases graduated from — college. They are certain that with the right amount of information, they can perform as good a job managing their financial portfolio as the professional stockbroker. While some day traders have indeed made quite a lucrative living for themselves, most would-be investors are loath to take the responsibility of losing their own money onto their own shoulders.
We all admire the underdog — that determined individual flaunting authority and tradition to make something of himself (or herself). Imagine the Rocky Balboa of Wall Street and you may be able to conjure the spirit of self-determination that guides a good many day traders. Now, while most of them are reliant on online trading platforms to make their exchanges, the savvy minority have opted to enroll in a professional day trading course or two.
This is a very prudent move by any standard of measure. While some may question the feasibility and long-term success of day trading, the argument is shifted in favor of the scrappy day trader as he or she could well boast that they have completed a curriculum that most professionals are subjected to as a matter of course. Indeed, a bit of professional training goes a long way, especially in the dog-eat-dog realm of stocks and bonds. Trader beware and be prepared.
Gather round, you sons and daughter of liberty and find your El Dorado with a professional day trading course. Cast off the shackles of Wall Street and take your financial portfolio into your own hands today.
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