Articles / What can I expect to make in my first year of trading?

Published on Thursday December 28th 2006
Written by Joe Ross

I get questions like this one quite often. I find that most aspiring traders don’t have a clue as to what to expect from the market. Yet here they are, putting up their money. Most are going to learn the hard way.

I have no idea in the world what you can expect to make in your first year of trading, or any other year, for that matter. What I can tell you is that without proper guidance and help, you are probably going to have some very bitter experiences. Why? Because your anticipations are almost completely wrong.

Futures traders, especially beginning traders, often open an account with unrealistic expectations of trading performance. These expectations could be formed by the sales literature for a trading program that emphasizes its profitability, by reports of success stories by top traders or by some brokers within the industry. In all cases, you are rarely made aware of the many other times when performances were considerably worse. In other words, you are a victim of selection bias.

Most advertisers of courses, systems, books, etc., will mislead you into thinking that you just can’t lose if you buy what they are selling. I am talking here about hype, major hype – as much as the authorities will allow them to get away with.

Selection bias is a term well known within the social sciences and occurs whenever some undesired screening factor leads to a misrepresentation of a population sample. For example, traders seldom express their losing trades with as much enthusiasm as their winning trades. Consequently, a random selection of letters or phone calls received by a company that sells a trading program often will overstate the proportion of traders who are doing well. Sometimes the cause of the selection bias is not obvious. For instance, let's say that a trader who purchases a very expensive price and charting package is more profitable than another trader without it. The merits of the package seem obvious. Maybe not. It could be that the individual who can afford to purchase the package is better capitalized than the other trader and this is the reason for the better performance…

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This article was written by:

Joe Ross Joe Ross

Joe Ross has been trading for nearly 5 decades and is a well known Master Trader, author and trading educator. Joe survived all the up and downs of the markets due to his adaptable trading style, using a low-risk approach that produces consistent profits.

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