Please forget the idea of turning $500 to $50,000, or even to $5,000, within a short period. There exist many quieter and safer methods to grow your money. These work perfectly with $500 at the beginning. First, lower your return expectations. Instead, of 50% a month, I would act on the assumption of 20% annual return. If you can do that, you are good at it.
I know that I will probably disappoint some readers when I say making 1 to 2% a month are top performances. Nevertheless, they are actually top results, especially when you achieve this performance every month on a continuous basis.
Perhaps you are under the impression that you can earn $1000 a month with a $1000 account. I am sorry to disappoint you here, but such returns are possible only by incurring extreme risks. The chance that you will succeed at this, month after month tends towards zero. Get it out of your head! It will not work, and if this book can rid you of this illusion, my work is half-finished already.
I want to stress that there are alternatives to these exaggerated expectations. These alternatives are much more interesting and easier. You can realize your dream of a large trading account one day, but the path to it is probably different than you would imagine. Honestly, I wish I had someone said this to me at the beginning of my trading career. It would have spared me many years of futile attempts, trying to multiply a mini account using futures. Of course, you could collect experience in this way. However, these experiences I can pass on.
Who am I? I am a trader with over 15 years’ experience in the markets, who has witnessed all the vicissitudes of the trading business. I have traded for a hedge fund in forex trading, as well as for managed accounts. I know this industry and its tricks, very well. I have repeatedly witnessed this little drama of a starting trader, driving his entire trading account on the wall, and I have done it myself several times. I know what it looks like and how it feels.
The problem is not the money. One can get over the loss of $500. You gained experience. It did not work out, but it is not a drama. There are also people who start with a $50,000 account, even with a $500,000 account, and these accounts often also no longer exist after 3 or 6 months.
Therefore, it is obvious that it is not the amount of capital at stake. It does not matter if you start with $500 or $50,000. Something seems to be going fundamentally wrong in this trading business, no matter how much money you have available. This desire to increase the starting capital quickly seems to lead to exactly the opposite. This applies for at least 95% of the beginners. I must confess, this is one of the saddest statistics I know.
Imagine if 95% of bakery apprentices would fail in the bakery, because baking little breads is too difficult a profession. That this is definitely not the case proves that people are doing something right in the bakeries. Baking bread is a profession that you can learn, provided you are willing to get up early and follow the instructions of the Master Baker.
I declare herewith, that trading and currency trading are no more difficult professions than baking. However, the prerequisite is that the new trader is willing to get up early (though not as early as the baker's apprentice) and follow the instructions of the “Master Baker”.
Concerning trading, the first thing to take note of, is the instructions of the Master Baker. Unfortunately, this does not happen and that is probably the main reason the statistics are so disastrous, when it comes to success in trading. It is even worse. Not only are the instructions of the Master Baker not being followed, but also the “Master Baker” is simply not there. Most starting traders are just sitting alone in their room in front of the computer screen and romp through the market as they please.
This book is therefore about the instructions of the “Master Baker.” It is up to you, dear reader, whether you take note or not. At least the “Master Baker” has done his duty.