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You ever wonder what separates traders who actually make it from those who don't? I was reading about Dan Zanger recently and his story is honestly wild.
So here's the thing - Zanger wasn't born into wealth or anything. Back in the mid-90s he was literally a construction worker, frustrated with his situation. But instead of just complaining, he got obsessed with understanding the market. Spent his free time studying chart patterns, learning technical analysis, really putting in the work.
By 1996 he had saved up about $10k and decided to actually put his knowledge to the test. Timing worked out perfectly because the late 90s tech boom was just getting started. While most people were chasing hype, Zanger was using his technical analysis skills - reading ascending channels, flag formations, all that chart pattern stuff - to make calculated moves in tech stocks.
Here's where it gets crazy. In roughly two years, Dan Zanger turned that $10k into $18 million. And in December 1999, at the peak of the tech bull run, he hit a 29,000% return for the year. Guinness actually recognized it as the world record for personal trading profit percentage.
But what's really interesting about Dan Zanger's approach wasn't luck. It was discipline. He followed his rules, managed risk like it was his job (because it was), and never let emotions make his decisions. That's the actual skill that separated him from everyone else riding the bubble.
The reason I'm bringing this up now is because Zanger's story shows something important - in trading, it's not about the size of your account when you start. It's about understanding the market, having a system, and actually sticking to it. That's the foundation that builds real wealth.
Zanger is still around in the trading world today, sharing what he's learned over the years. His journey from construction worker to market legend is definitely worth studying if you're serious about understanding what actually works in this space.