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William Shippey retired early after he began day trading with an inheritance.
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The 44-year-old said he deployed several strategies to amass around $800,000 in wealth.
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He hasn't worked in two years and says he plans to never work again, beyond some passion projects.
William Shippey, 44, hasn't worked in about two years.
The former bank analyst says he's confident he'll probably never have to work again, apart from maybe on some side projects he'll consider picking up in the future to pass his free time.
Beyond checking the stock market in the morning — and occasionally, making a trade or two — he describes his life as largely untethered from adult responsibilities, with most of his waking hours spent working in his yard.
Shippey has around $800,000 in his brokerage account and said he expected to make around $7,000 this month in investment dividends, according to financial statements and screenshots of his brokerage account shared with Business Insider.
Besides a Tesla he purchased in 2023, Shippey says he and his wife live pretty frugally, which also helps add to their sense of financial security. The couple lives child-free and rent-free in a garage apartment in South Carolina, which they secured through a family connection.
Each month, he withdraws around $3,500 from his investment portfolio. He hands $3,000 to his wife to handle bills, like their health insurance. The remainder is fun money he can spend on his hobbies.
“I have no rent. I have no mortgage. I don't have kids,” Shippey told BI in an interview. “For all intents and purposes, I'm retired.”
Shippey is part of a tiny group of day traders that have actually made money over time. He's among the wave of Gen Z and millennials who flooded the market during the pandemic stock boom, many of whom were flush with pandemic stimulus and had plentiful free time amid lockdowns and work from home.
But, unlike the majority of retail traders, Shippey's trades have been wildly successful. One 2020 study found that 97% of investors who traded for more than 300 days lost money, while less than 1% earned $54 or more a day.
Shippey says he first opened up a Robinhood account and began trading in 2022, around the time r/WallStreetBets, Roaring Kitty, and GameStop kicked off the meme stock boom.
He funded his account with around $20,000 in spare cash and tried his hand at trading options and swing trading key stocks. Besides an undergraduate accounting degree and some time working in commercial credit analysis at banks, his knowledge of markets is self-taught, he said.