{"id":1900,"date":"2008-06-26T05:00:08","date_gmt":"2008-06-26T12:00:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/getrichslowly.org\/blog\/?p=1900"},"modified":"2023-12-05T15:24:33","modified_gmt":"2023-12-05T22:24:33","slug":"the-nonconformists-guide-to-personal-finance","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.getrichslowly.org\/the-nonconformists-guide-to-personal-finance\/","title":{"rendered":"The Nonconformists\u2019 Guide to Personal Finance"},"content":{"rendered":"

<\/span>My short life as a daytrader<\/span><\/h2>\n

In my second year of college, I decided to take out $10,000 in student loans and become a daytrader. I could earn far more than the low 4% rate the loans came with, and I planned to finance my education with the winnings.\"\"<\/p>\n

Sounds like a great idea, right?<\/p>\n

There I was, hanging out in the school library, taking up two or three monitors with stock tickers running across the screen and Excel spreadsheets tracking my trades. A copy of Barron’s <\/em>would be spread out beside me, and the Wall Street Journal<\/em> wasn’t far away.<\/p>\n

So how did it go? Well, there were a couple of problems.<\/p>\n

    \n
  1. Real-time trading was hard to do in 1997.<\/em> Back then, the internet was up and running well, and Datek Online had just launched, but real-time trading was still restricted to people with a lot faster connections than my school library had.<\/li>\n
  2. Apparently, the school library was not designed for my exclusive use.<\/em> For some reason, the library staff grew weary of my hanging out in the library all day, taking up three computers. I tried to play it cool when they asked me about it \u2014 “Oh, is there a problem?”\u2014 but in the end I was put on library restriction: I could use only one computer at a time, and if others were waiting to do academic work, the stock trading would have to stop. Not wanting to pay for a better computer and connection at home, I finally gave it up.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    Fast-forward ten years, and I haven’t done any stock trading since then, but I’ve managed to choose unusual paths most of that time:<\/p>\n