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Recruitment of participants Robotwealth Bundle Quant Course

Robotwealth Bundle Quant Course

videos are not enough, there's also text transcripts and sometimes answers to questions in the videos. a proper rip needs to be done.
 
i might bite the bullet do a 1 month of RW Pro to do a full rip for everything, if coursetalker is not comfortable enough with sharing his credentials :)
 
There's videos, other documents etc. I can do a full rip the question is the pricing. I'm not exactly sure how it works here but it seems like even after the group buy is done there's an additional income stream through others that buy? I've asked but so far no insight. I can do a clean rip of multiple courses but we're looking at 1.5-2k for the courses and my time. Just for sharing credentials I don't think I'm up for that as it contains personal identifying data. For 2k I might do it. There's a nice overview sheet with all the currently still running strategies and others that have been dismissed. I'd rather refer you guys though to the quantpedia group buy which contains a lot more strategies (900), clean code and up to date out of sample performance, often based on academic research. I refer you to here for more information:

 
Robotwealth courses are very practical. The users are only signing up for the RW Bundle Quant Course not the full package. Currently we are 8 users, you could accept that amount and take the money.
 
I mean will this one add value to those materials?
I did the "Trade Like a Quant" course in the past. It's good content - it just depends on what style you want to do (systematic/quant vs discretionary). At the end of the day though, the "future" is blending the two together. Leveraging quant/systematic skills to augment discretionary trading. So can't go wrong really. But depending on where you're at it may not be directly applicable - for example if you're into short-term intraday trading.
 
Over time, you'll find that even building out systematic strategies (even if you're not allocating capital towards them) can be used as signals to enhance your own discretionary trading decisions, which is pretty dope / "big brain" thinking.
 
Thank you @Capital & @MrTradoor .
Yes, I'm not very sure about the quant path, considering the point I'm at rn in my trading. For the time being, I'll stick with discretionary order flow methodologies until I gain sufficient understanding of the market (both psychologically and time-wise).
 
Over time, you'll find that even building out systematic strategies (even if you're not allocating capital towards them) can be used as signals to enhance your own discretionary trading decisions, which is pretty dope / "big brain" thinking.
Definitely 💯. I'd like to go through the Sinclair materials thoroughly. And later I'll consider these too.
 
Thank you @Capital & @MrTradoor .
Yes, I'm not very sure about the quant path, considering the point I'm at rn in my trading. For the time being, I'll stick with discretionary order flow methodologies until I gain sufficient understanding of the market (both psychologically and time-wise).
Also recommend checking out Linda Raschke's content she has good principles, also a "Market Wizard" (which if you haven't read or are aware or you should at some point). She's got a lot of free content on YouTube, also I've seen her courses on here and other course websites for sale. It's good stuff - but it's all a case of time management. Trading knowledge is practically limitless so you have to draw lines somewhere.

If you have time constraints, easiest thing to do (imo) is to narrow down your analysis and "trading time" to a specific *part* of the day. Also focus on a specific market (rather than spreading yourself too thin).
 
If you have time constraints, easiest thing to do (imo) is to narrow down your analysis and "trading time" to a specific *part* of the day. Also focus on a specific market (rather than spreading yourself too thin).
Thank you for the suggestion.
Yes, I do follow that approach. I trade indice options in local market.
And starting up with ES/NQ futures. For this I only focus during the first hour. Sometimes I observe the market for another half an hour just to see the nuances.

I did have a look at crypto and CFDs but didn't like them much. I've been trading options for a decent time, so eventually have my plan towards that in the US market.
 
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