Bear Bull Traders - Anyone rolled in with their training program?

INCC

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As I am looking to start with day trading and stocks in general then I figured that I need to roll in with some paid courses to cut down the learning curve as much as possible.

I see that Investopedia has listed this program as their #1 course of all: https://bearbulltraders.com/

This is not an advertisement and they most probably won't even need one if reputed sites like Investopedia have considered them to be one of the best here.

But Investopedia isn't a forum so I would like some suggestions from those who have already been through similar road.

Youtube won't work as there's too much information (also bad one) and you can't build a learning roadmap for yourself if you don't have a clue what you need to learn exactly.

1. Recommend day trading courses that worked for you.

Thanks
 
I've subscribed two months ago for 1 months 200$ minus coupon code.
And with that you can see all the tutorial and it's cheap for the price.
It's very good but there's a lot of stuff inside.
For me, i'm focusing on thor strategy which use camarilla pivot points, i've seen all his tutorial and it's pretty good but it's hard to make money even if you follow all the course...
 
I would stick to offering services. Higher ROI is not the matter of luck, but it's guaranteed.
 
I've subscribed two months ago for 1 months 200$ minus coupon code.
And with that you can see all the tutorial and it's cheap for the price.
It's very good but there's a lot of stuff inside.
For me, i'm focusing on thor strategy which use camarilla pivot points, i've seen all his tutorial and it's pretty good but it's hard to make money even if you follow all the course...

The learning curve is few years or so to get proficient and I get that - I expect nothing less to invest than a few years.

r/DayTrading has lots of great stuff too, not guides or tutorials per se but a great community so I don't even expect to make a buck before a year.. Gotta paper trade first.
 
The learning curve is few years or so to get proficient and I get that - I expect nothing less to invest than a few years.

r/DayTrading has lots of great stuff too, not guides or tutorials per se but a great community so I don't even expect to make a buck before a year.. Gotta paper trade first.
Why not go for software production or services? It's difficult to me to see why you would not get a degree in economics and just spend 3 years watching online courses.
 
Why not go for software production or services? It's difficult to me to see why you would not get a degree in economics and just spend 3 years watching online courses.
Because it's fun and it pays well.

Why should I enter software production.. They don't pay, the learning curve is even steeper and you will start your career off from Freelancer.com offering custom-coded bots to losers like us.

Also, who is getting a degree in economics? Completely unnecessary - You don't need a degree to day trade.
 
I tag @IamNRE as he has definitely something good to say :D
 
Because it's fun and it pays well.

Why should I enter software production.. They don't pay, the learning curve is even steeper and you will start your career off from Freelancer.com offering custom-coded bots to losers like us.

Also, who is getting a degree in economics? Completely unnecessary - You don't need a degree to day trade.
No, it doesn't pay well. My friend started from the minimal wage as a day trader. He had that degree and would understand everything not knowing what bitcoin is.

You would enter the software production to make the bot for yourself.

My friend says it's more fun than gambling, but the odds are the same.
So to me it seems like you want to learn for 2 years how to gamble.
 
No, it doesn't pay well. My friend started from the minimal wage as a day trader. He had that degree and would understand everything not knowing what bitcoin is.

You would enter the software production to make the bot for yourself.

My friend says it's more fun than gambling, but the odds are the same.
So to me it seems like you want to learn for 2 years how to gamble.
It pays well - Check some Day Trading communities on Reddit. There are obviously tons of people who bust their accounts, risk is everywhere with everything.

And it's far from gambling. It's only gambling if you don't know what you are doing.. just because your friend didn't make it doesn't mean that everyone else couldn't do it.

If you think that trading is gambling then with that it's pretty much everything said - People who stick around and have managed to make it work for themselves earn good and well.. Trading is one of the hardest things to learn but that's what makes it fun as well.
 
I bet id be easier to start another bhw than be successful with this.

>modern software development has stepper learning curve than learning how to win with forex
whaat
 
As I am looking to start with day trading and stocks in general then I figured that I need to roll in with some paid courses to cut down the learning curve as much as possible.

I see that Investopedia has listed this program as their #1 course of all: https://bearbulltraders.com/

This is not an advertisement and they most probably won't even need one if reputed sites like Investopedia have considered them to be one of the best here.

But Investopedia isn't a forum so I would like some suggestions from those who have already been through similar road.

Youtube won't work as there's too much information (also bad one) and you can't build a learning roadmap for yourself if you don't have a clue what you need to learn exactly.

1. Recommend day trading courses that worked for you.

Thanks

I normally don't buy courses. I just typed something generic about options or whatever term I wanted to watch, watched videos from different creators, and once I kept seeing good content from a few people, I subscribed to their channel.


You should always watch content from different people, that's how you'll get a common reference for accurate information and also discover who's style of teaching you like and also discover some unique insights from someone.

Good luck if you decide to buy that course.
 
@INCC what's your exp like with trading already mate?

I'm a pretty firm believer than most trading courses are bs and that the best way to learn (any kind of trading) is to do it regularly on a small scale.
 
@INCC what's your exp like with trading already mate?

I'm a pretty firm believer than most trading courses are bs and that the best way to learn (any kind of trading) is to do it regularly on a small scale.
@INCC you are lucky. VSYNC is like my friend who is daytrading crypto. That guy with a degree. My friend doubled money in his binance account in 2 months playing short and long strategy on 10 different assets. But he doesn't claim it was easy. Daily following trends, telegram channels and preparing for the worst. It's a mental game.

There is a youtuber called cryptoface if you find winners' stories interesting.
 
I normally don't buy courses. I just typed something generic about options or whatever term I wanted to watch, watched videos from different creators, and once I kept seeing good content from a few people, I subscribed to their channel.


You should always watch content from different people, that's how you'll get a common reference for accurate information and also discover who's style of teaching you like and also discover some unique insights from someone.

Good luck if you decide to buy that course.

@INCC what's your exp like with trading already mate?

I'm a pretty firm believer than most trading courses are bs and that the best way to learn (any kind of trading) is to do it regularly on a small scale.
I also think that most courses are BS - especially when it comes to SEO and everything related but as I mentioned earlier then I read r/DayTrading and r/Stocks a lot lately. The guys there seem to agree that their biggest mistake was not starting off with a course because they wasted too much time watching bad or pointless videos from Youtube.

The problem is when you start off then you don't understand what's good information and which isn't so you accumulate tons of information that is unnecessary and you will be wasting time in general, therefore the learning curve or learning, in general, takes a longer time.

My experience so far? I don't have any experience besides some audiobooks + Udemy courses to understand the candlestick charts and other very basic elements of trading.

Youtube is too chaotic to navigate, a rookie without a roadmap, not knowing which learning modules to hop in with seems just a waste of time.. Lots of courses have these things in perspective as they understand what you need probably better than yourself... 100-200 $ bucks per month ain't that bad deal either.
 
I also think that most courses are BS - especially when it comes to SEO and everything related but as I mentioned earlier then I read r/DayTrading and r/Stocks a lot lately. The guys there seem to agree that their biggest mistake was not starting off with a course because they wasted too much time watching bad or pointless videos from Youtube.

The problem is when you start off then you don't understand what's good information and which isn't so you accumulate tons of information that is unnecessary and you will be wasting time in general, therefore the learning curve or learning, in general, takes a longer time.

My experience so far? I don't have any experience besides some audiobooks + Udemy courses to understand the candlestick charts and other very basic elements of trading.

Youtube is too chaotic to navigate, a rookie without a roadmap, not knowing which learning modules to hop in with seems just a waste of time.. Lots of courses have these things in perspective as they understand what you need probably better than yourself... 100-200 $ bucks per month ain't that bad deal either.
I'll try and have a look for any courses that seem valuable for starting out mate and will drop them through in dms if I find any.

Day trading can be a good way to make $$ after dedication, but sucks up a bunch of time too.
 
I'll try and have a look for any courses that seem valuable for starting out mate and will drop them through in dms if I find any.

Day trading can be a good way to make $$ after dedication, but sucks up a bunch of time too.
Thanks. Please do.
 
Don't day trade, do swing trades instead.
Buy and HODL leaps, or do the "wheel", or buy debit spreads ending in 3-14 days.

I'm mainly doing the last thing and the 1st thing.

Ask the pro traders the books they recommend, but personally I'd find it too stressful to have to watch the charts every day and watch my trades... plus you need $25k to do day trading otherwise you'll be restricted.

https://support.tastyworks.com/support/solutions/articles/43000435180-pattern-day-trading-rules-pdt-
That's why I say do swing trades - debit spreads, LEAPS or The wheel.
 
Don't day trade, do swing trades instead.
Buy and HODL leaps, or do the "wheel", or buy debit spreads ending in 3-14 days.

I'm mainly doing the last thing and the 1st thing.

Ask the pro traders the books they recommend, but personally I'd find it too stressful to have to watch the charts every day and watch my trades... plus you need $25k to do day trading otherwise you'll be restricted.

https://support.tastyworks.com/support/solutions/articles/43000435180-pattern-day-trading-rules-pdt-
That's why I say do swing trades - debit spreads, LEAPS or The wheel.
Tradezero will solve the pdt problem...

And yes it's very stressfull to daytrade
I papertrade since 7months with interactive broker(i'm french so i don't have the pdt problem for us citizens)and i'm not positive so...

Some good book :

Anna couling - A Complete Guide To Volume Price Analysis
Franklin O Ochoa - Secret of a pivot boss
Jim Dalton - Market in profile
 
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