Bargain Hunter said:
How many traders do you know that can compound at 50% p.a.? Within a less than 20 years they would be on the BRW 200 Rich list. Yet there largely continued and conspicuous absence shows that it rarely happens or is not scale-able or some combination of the two.
Ahh, the "benchmarking to billionaires" as a measure of success argument again.

Although it has been addressed already in this thread, I'll give you my take on that:
Of the 50-odd billionaires in Australia, maybe 1 or 2 have got there through investing like you or me. And of those, they are now at the thin end of their life anyway. So that benchmark is irrelevant.
Now, let's address the mentality of measured success, which incidentally, in my view, is a total misconception to most, especially in recent years.
To most - especially (in my experience) property investors, the measure of success is net worth. They (in my experience) will measure their own self-worth by comparing it to their own vs others book value, or accumulation of assets.
I know some who fall into this category who live very frugally, by default forcing their families to live by the same frugal means, to grow that book value, and compound it, and scrimp, and save, and grow it more, year after year after year. It is a life driven by net-worth, at all costs, and in many cases a life wasted that could otherwise have enjoyed the fruits of their success. It is a mentality of "the one who dies with the highest score wins".
There are, of course, exceptions to this rule. However, in my experience, they are much less common.
Then there are those who can yield >50% of their investment..... year after year after year. These people do not need to compound, and to do so would soon become unmanageable anyway. They can live it up, live a good and fulfilling life, live where they want to, how they want to, and enjoy life, and have their family do the same, year after year, knowing they can do it again next year, and not need to make a spectacle of themselves whilst doing so. They do not need to hit the once-in-a-lifetime to da' moon jackpot, or worry about what the market is doing next year, or where next-year's yields are coming from. They enjoy their life - to the maximum extent that their returns sensibly allow them to, and know that a life lived is worth shyteloads more than a life scrimped and dedicated to book value.
Guess which one is the successful trader?