Many vehicles can take you to your goal. Some will lead you in the right direction, whereas others
will take you in the wrong direction. These vehicles are the systems and methods of futures trading.
I can’t tell you which system is best for you. All I can do is to acquaint you with the various methods
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The performance of trading systems is not static. Systems go through good times as well as bad.
Traders go through good times as well as bad. Traders and systems interact in a complex combina-
tion.
I can’t give you the ultimate answers, but I can acquaint you with the tools. I can give you the
knowledge to help you make your own decisions based upon the facts. As you read the remainder of
this course, keep your mind tuned to the issues I have just raised, looking for answers as you go.
Assuming that you have already had some experience in this area, you will recognize the answers
more easily.
The Fuel
The energy that drives the wheel of successful speculation is good old-fashioned money.
To make it, you have to have it, and to multiply it you have to use it wisely. You know the risk is
immense and that the odds are stacked against you. Your chances of making it in the competitive
world of futures trading are probably five or ten in 100, but they are reduced to zero by starting with
nothing.
Successful speculation is not a get-rich-quick scheme, a no-money-down real estate venture or a 15-
million-to-one odds lottery ticket. The facts of futures trading dictate very clearly that the more you
start with, the greater your chance of success and the less you start with, the greater your chance of
failure.
“How much is enough?” you ask.
I can give you some guidelines. Based on current conditions in the futures market, the beginner
should have sufficient capital to meet liberal marginal requirements on at least five contracts in the
futures market.
If we assume, for example, that the average margin on a futures contract is $2,500, then we are looking
at approximately $12,500 in speculative capital. I don’t think it is realistic for you to expect success if
you begin with less.
Don’t be fooled!
Some individuals will tell you that you need virtually nothing in the way of starting capital, whereas
others will tell you need much, much more. I won’t argue the fact that the more you have to start with
the better your odds of success, however, there is a limit on the downside.
Certainly you must consider the fact that you don’t want to risk everything. When someone asks me
how much he or she should risk in futures trading, I answer the question with a question. I ask, “How
much can you afford to lose?” One answer might be $10,000. I respond, “Take this slip of paper on
which I have written $10,000. Rip it into shreds. Flush it down the toilet. How do you feel?”
This small test represents a little experiment that may help you determine how much you can afford to
lose in the futures market without too serious an emotional reaction to the consequences.
Financially, the answer is different. How much can you afford to lose from this standpoint? I would
suggest that as a rule of thumb, you risk not more than 25 % of your total liquid risk capital!
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