i'm certain she certainly wasn't one to visit the confessional
Professional trader?
I think being a pro means people look up to you most of the time, you have an influence circle, you can inspire others and maybe show an example how to do etc..
Otherwise, as a full time sports trader I call myself pro because this is my profession, I have established a company dealing with sports trading and at some point I had people working for me to get better in trading.
Believe it or not, some aspects of trading requires more than one man, the technical advance, data collection, statistics, office management , nutrition etc are crucial if you look forward to do this till you retire. Matter of vision and all these really matters imho.
Otherwise, as a full time sports trader I call myself pro because this is my profession, I have established a company dealing with sports trading and at some point I had people working for me to get better in trading.
Believe it or not, some aspects of trading requires more than one man, the technical advance, data collection, statistics, office management , nutrition etc are crucial if you look forward to do this till you retire. Matter of vision and all these really matters imho.
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... OR, he only get's it right half the time
in seriousness tho, why not just *football trader*, or *now trading football*
I accidentally re-ignited this debate on that bastion of knowledge, Twitter.
People were arguing for both sides, but the counter was that P&L isn't a measure of a professional trader.
If you worked for a city firm and lost a lot of money or didn't make much you would be sacked. So it still feels like measuring a professional trader by the performance is the right thing. There are no qualifications or points of reference for work completed and the competence of such.
People were arguing for both sides, but the counter was that P&L isn't a measure of a professional trader.
If you worked for a city firm and lost a lot of money or didn't make much you would be sacked. So it still feels like measuring a professional trader by the performance is the right thing. There are no qualifications or points of reference for work completed and the competence of such.
- ShaunWhite
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PL is a range.
Professional or not professional is a binary.
Where do you draw the line on the PL?
"Primary source of income" seems easiest and inherently assumes profitability?
Professional or not professional is a binary.
Where do you draw the line on the PL?
"Primary source of income" seems easiest and inherently assumes profitability?
Last edited by ShaunWhite on Thu Dec 02, 2021 10:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
- ShaunWhite
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For me, someone who earns as much as they want to with the least possible effort. Other people have their own idea of what success is so I don't feel the need to impose one.. But realisically I'd imagine for most it's just the guy who's made the most money.
- ShaunWhite
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I'd probably fall on your side of the debate. You're right, how else?
I think there are three answers.
Expert, successful and professional.
Expert means you really know your stuff. Successful means you are doing something you enjoy successfully on your specific terms. So both are compatible with being a professional or not. But ultimately professional means you do it for a living. But the individual definition is different.
I think as a trader, you can't be a professional if you consistently lose money. But you could be considered a professional at any level if you did make money. But ultimately the professional tags is judgement on your P&L, but the prior two answers are not reliant on that.
Expert, successful and professional.
Expert means you really know your stuff. Successful means you are doing something you enjoy successfully on your specific terms. So both are compatible with being a professional or not. But ultimately professional means you do it for a living. But the individual definition is different.
I think as a trader, you can't be a professional if you consistently lose money. But you could be considered a professional at any level if you did make money. But ultimately the professional tags is judgement on your P&L, but the prior two answers are not reliant on that.
You don't have professional traders at city firms, you have traders.Euler wrote: ↑Thu Dec 02, 2021 10:02 amIf you worked for a city firm and lost a lot of money or didn't make much you would be sacked. So it still feels like measuring a professional trader by the performance is the right thing. There are no qualifications or points of reference for work completed and the competence of such.
For me success (being profitable?) is a minor if not totally unimportant point. Just because someone is making a lot of money doesn't mean they are a good person to go to for advice, they might be terrible at giving it and vice versa.
PDC nailed it here for mePDC wrote: ↑Wed Dec 05, 2018 11:07 amThe short answer simply put, is I would define a 'professional trader' as a cock.
As soon as I hear anyone prefix their job with the word professional alarm bells go up, tbh it only seems to happen in trading. To me they come across as someone who is for whatever reason trying to put themselves above others, they aren't satisfied in their own ability deep down and or the level of recognition they receive for what they achieve. They are insecure and feel they need to try and put others down to boost their own feelings in what they do.
It seems to be something that has been created around trading on Betfair. I don't know one other person who feels a need to prefix what they do with the word professional. You don't hear people say they are a professional teacher, a professional doctor, a professional builder, professional butcher, professional taxi driver, professional porn star If I did hear someone describe themselves that way I would simply think, you are a prized Tw@t, good bye.
The only area I would permit its use is in sport where there is a clear distinction between an amateur and professional e.g. in Horse Racing.
Otherwise. they are a builder, plumber or a part time taxi driver etc.
You need to tell whoever they are that they are just a trader or a part time trader and to get over themselves.
I don't think labels and prefixes matter at all, but for the sake of the argument I think it's clear enough, since official certificates don't really exist you don't have a real basis on which to label yourself a licensed pro Now granted, past a certain profit/credibility point you've earned the right to call yourself whatever the hell you want, even God Trader if you will. But I think PDC is talking more about traders out there that want to build credibility and such by using the "pro" prefix since they clearly feel their credentials are a bit lacking.
You can use the "expert" and similar prefixes if you really feel the need to differentiate yourself from other traders, but if we're being technical about it, I don't think anyone that's been dabbling in the markets for a week/month etc can call themselves a trader yet, they're trying to be one so an "aspiring trader" would be the best fit there.
The definition of success is so subjective that I don't even wanna touch that one. I like the "full-time" prefix the most because it implies by default that you are successful enough to live off trading, although "part-time" trader is similar and a part-timer can easily make more than a full-timer.
Because if you say to somebody that you're a "sports trader" then you've just invited a 100 annoying subquestions with a high likelihood of forever being stigmatized
- wearthefoxhat
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Google definitions;
I like the synonym; Crackerjack...never did get my pencil from Leslie Crowther...
I like the synonym; Crackerjack...never did get my pencil from Leslie Crowther...
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It my most senior role in a corporation I actually refused to put a title on my business card (yes it was a while ago) as I felt that prejudiced peoples opinion on what I could do or why I was in a meeting. I wanted to be judged on what I did, not what people thought I should do.
I'd worked at all levels across different organisations, so it felt appropriate not to be pigeonholed into a specific role. I could speak to the FD, sort out a logistics issue, narrow in on a product issue, close a deal. So I wore many hats. I had enough knowledge to pull things together, so my experience was broad enough to make things happen, but not 'expert' enough to get bogged down in the detail.
I'd worked at all levels across different organisations, so it felt appropriate not to be pigeonholed into a specific role. I could speak to the FD, sort out a logistics issue, narrow in on a product issue, close a deal. So I wore many hats. I had enough knowledge to pull things together, so my experience was broad enough to make things happen, but not 'expert' enough to get bogged down in the detail.