Lance Breitstein: The Prop Trader Who Set Trillium's All-Time PnL Record
Lance Breitstein was, by his own admission, nearly out of the business in his first year at Trillium Trading. A decade later, he had set the firm's all-time PnL record with consecutive 8-figure years in 2020 and 2021, won "Top Trader" by landslide both years, mentored dozens of the firm's best discretionary traders, and built a reputation as one of the most analytically rigorous intraday traders working anywhere. He's the trader serious retail traders study when they want to understand prop-level execution.
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The Snapshot
Lance Breitstein is the kind of trader serious retail traders find through Chat With Traders and then immediately want to study harder than anything else in their library. He joined the proprietary trading firm Trillium in 2011 straight out of college with limited stock market background, nearly quit during a brutal first stretch, found a mentor inside the firm, and gradually built himself into what is widely described as Trillium's best trader in the firm's history. He won the "Top Trader" rank at Trillium in both 2020 and 2021 with consecutive 8-figure years, set the firm's all-time PnL record, and trained dozens of the firm's top discretionary intraday traders before resigning at the start of 2022 to pursue alternative growth opportunities and philanthropy. Chat With Traders Ep. 236
For day traders who want to see what serious prop-level execution actually looks like, Breitstein is the most accessible high-resolution example in the public domain. He's appeared on Chat With Traders three times, sat for a three-hour interview with Trillium's Jonathan Chariton, done multiple long-form podcast appearances, and is unusually articulate about the actual mental architecture of trading rather than the surface-level pattern recognition that dominates most retail education. He's part of our broader retail trader survey because, even though he traded prop capital rather than retail capital, his methodology and learning process translate cleanly to retail accounts. MoneyShow
College Curiosity to Trillium Hire
Breitstein's path into trading wasn't preordained. He started with limited knowledge of the stock market in college, developed curiosity through self-education, and eventually found his way into Trillium's proprietary trader hiring process in 2011. Trillium is one of the more selective U.S. equity-focused prop firms — not the largest, but with a reputation for hiring traders selectively and training them seriously. The interview-and-evaluation process for new prop traders at Trillium-tier firms is structurally different from retail trading: rather than testing your existing knowledge, the firm is evaluating whether you have the temperamental and analytical raw material to learn what they're going to teach. Breitstein had it; the early performance didn't yet show it. Eightify (Chat With Traders summary)
The Near-Quit Period
Breitstein has been candid in his Chat With Traders interviews that he was on the verge of quitting trading entirely during his early Trillium period. The combination of slow progress, the pressure of trading prop capital where losses count against you, and the absence of clear feedback about whether his skills were actually improving produced exactly the doubt cycle that ends most prop-trader careers. The dropout rate at prop firms is structurally high — the firm is, in effect, paying you to learn while also expecting you to start producing within a defined window, and many traders don't make the transition fast enough to remain economically viable to the firm. Chat With Traders Ep. 228
The Mentorship That Worked
The inflection point in Breitstein's Trillium career came from being mentored by a skilled day trader inside the firm. The specific identity of the mentor isn't always disclosed in public interviews, but the structure of the mentorship is — close working proximity, daily review of trades, direct feedback on what was working and what wasn't, and access to the actual mental models the mentor used rather than just the resulting trade decisions. The framing matters: the mentor wasn't selling a course; the mentor was a peer working at the same firm with shared incentives to make Breitstein successful, because Trillium's economics depend on developing traders who eventually produce. Eightify
The first breakthrough that built Breitstein's confidence was a single day on which he made approximately $11,000. The dollar amount isn't important on its own — for a prop trader, $11K is a normal day, not a career-defining one. What mattered was the demonstration that the methodology he was building actually worked, that the pattern recognition was real, and that the slow grinding learning curve was producing results that would eventually compound. The single-day win didn't change his trading; it changed his belief that the trading would change. That belief was what let him continue investing the multi-year effort required to actually reach prop-trader-elite performance. Eightify
Back-to-Back 8-Figure Years
The Breitstein trajectory accelerated through the late 2010s and culminated in 2020 and 2021. Both years, he won the "Top Trader" rank at Trillium by what the firm characterized as a landslide margin — meaning his PnL substantially exceeded the next-best trader at the firm, not just edged them out. Both years were 8-figure individual years for him personally, which at prop-firm economics implies substantially larger gross trading volume and gross profit numbers for the firm. He set Trillium's all-time PnL record in this period. Chat With Traders Ep. 236
The 2020-2021 environment is important context. The pandemic-era market produced unusual volatility patterns — heavy retail participation, meme-stock episodes, parabolic moves in low-quality stocks, and exceptionally clean opportunity for skilled discretionary intraday traders who could exploit the temporary market structure. Breitstein's record-setting performance is partly attributable to the favorable regime, which he has acknowledged in interviews. The right framing isn't that his methodology only works in volatile regimes; it's that skilled discretionary intraday trading produces outsized returns specifically when volatility is high, and the 2020-2021 environment was where his skill set could compound most rapidly. The Wall Street Coach Podcast
The Three Core Concepts
Breitstein has publicly articulated three core trading concepts that have contributed disproportionately to his outperformance: The Broken Slot Machine, The Right Side of the V, and Channel Fundamentals. The naming is intentionally informal — these aren't textbook setups but mental models for thinking about specific market dynamics — and the concepts have become foundational reference points for the serious retail trading community that follows him. Chat With Traders Ep. 236
The Broken Slot Machine
The mental model for thinking about edge: a normal slot machine has negative expected value (the house wins over time), but a "broken" slot machine — one where the payouts are misconfigured in the player's favor — produces positive expected value as long as the misconfiguration persists. Breitstein's framing is that profitable trading is about finding broken-slot-machine conditions in the market: temporary structural inefficiencies where the expected value of a specific setup is positive, then exploiting them aggressively until other participants catch on and the inefficiency closes. The framework forces a clear distinction between trades that are profitable because the edge is real and trades that look profitable in hindsight but were structurally negative-expected-value bets that happened to win. Chat With Traders Ep. 236
The Right Side of the V
A specific intraday trading framework for capitulation reversals. A "V" pattern on a chart represents a capitulation low (or high) followed by a sharp reversal. The "right side" of the V is the recovery leg — the portion of the move that's tradeable for a directional position. Breitstein's framework distinguishes the trader who anticipates the V (catches the bottom) from the trader who waits for the V to confirm and then positions into the recovery leg. The latter is structurally easier to execute and produces higher hit rates, because the setup confirmation removes the guesswork from timing the exact bottom. Chat With Traders Ep. 236
Channel Fundamentals
The trader's discipline around recognizing what kind of market environment they're trading in (trending vs. ranging, high-vol vs. low-vol, news-driven vs. technical) and adapting bet sizing and setup selection accordingly. The same chart pattern carries different expected value in different market regimes, and Breitstein's framework requires explicit regime classification before any trade decision rather than treating setups as context-independent. The framework structurally mirrors Linda Raschke's preparation discipline applied to a prop-trader context. MoneyShow
| Breitstein approach | Detail |
|---|---|
| Style | Discretionary intraday equity trading |
| Specialty | Mid-cap mean reversion, capitulation reversals |
| Time horizon | Intraday to short-term (typically minutes to hours) |
| Core concepts | Broken Slot Machine, Right Side of the V, Channel Fundamentals |
| Bet sizing | Scaled to expected value of the specific setup × regime fit |
| Learning approach | Systematic review of "most important moments" |
| Trading capital | Trillium Trading proprietary capital |
The Right Side of the V
Capitulation low → wait for confirmation → enter on recovery leg → exit into strength
Systematized Learning and Repetition
One of the most repeated themes in Breitstein's public interviews is what he calls systematized learning — converting the random experience of taking trades into structured improvement by reviewing what he calls "the most important moments" in his trading. The framework: at the end of each trading day, identify the two or three moments that had the largest impact on the day's P&L, study what happened in those moments specifically, identify what was working or not working in his decision-making, and translate the analysis into explicit lessons for the next session. The discipline is what most retail traders mean when they talk about "journaling" but executed at a level of analytical rigor that most retail journals never reach. The Wall Street Coach Podcast
The aggregation of small wins is the related framework: rather than seeking the single career-defining trade, Breitstein has emphasized that long-term trading success is the compounding of small daily improvements in process and execution. The framing matches the broader Linda Raschke, Brian Shannon, and Anchored VWAP-tradition emphasis on the boring mechanical execution of the same setups over and over rather than the lottery-ticket trade. It's also one of the more transferable lessons in his coverage — most retail traders structurally undervalue the compounding-of-small-improvements approach in favor of trying to find the perfect strategy, even though the empirical evidence from the long-tenured profitable retail traders we cover in our broader trading education resources shows that consistent improvement is the actual edge. MoneyShow
Resignation and What's Next
At the beginning of 2022, Breitstein resigned from Trillium to focus on alternative growth opportunities and philanthropy. The exit was on terms that distinguish a successful prop trader's departure from the more common forced-exit dynamic — he left at the top of his career, with the firm-record performance fresh, and on terms that allowed him to take the public-speaking and educational opportunities that have followed. Since 2022, he has done extensive long-form podcast interviews including the three-hour conversation with Trillium's Jonathan Chariton, multiple Chat With Traders appearances, and various financial-press features. The transition pattern is consistent with what most named successful traders eventually do: trade hard while the edge is strongest, then transition to teaching, mentoring, and personal investments. Chat With Traders Ep. 236
What Traders Can Actually Learn From This
The first lesson from Breitstein's career is the meta-skill: learning how to learn faster from each trading session is more important than the specific strategy. He nearly quit early in his Trillium career, and what changed wasn't a better setup or a new indicator; it was the systematic learning discipline that converted random trading experience into structured improvement. Most retail traders treat their trading journal as a record-keeping chore rather than the primary tool for getting better. Breitstein's career is a long argument that the journal is the strategy — the systematic review of "most important moments" is what compounds skill, and traders who don't do it consistently aren't improving even when they think they are.
The second lesson is the Broken Slot Machine framework. The mental model forces a clear distinction between trades that win because the edge is real and trades that win because of variance. Most retail traders confuse the two: a winning trade feels like skill regardless of whether it was actually skill, and the confusion produces overconfidence and oversized subsequent positions. The Breitstein framing — only trade when you've identified a specific structural inefficiency you can articulate, and stop trading when the inefficiency closes — is one of the more rigorous mental disciplines available, and it's portable across any time frame and any instrument.
The third lesson is the value of finding a real mentor in a structured environment. Breitstein has been explicit that the mentor he found inside Trillium was the inflection point in his career. The mentor wasn't selling a course; the mentor had shared economic incentive to make Breitstein successful, because both their careers were tied to the firm's profitability. The retail equivalent of this is rare — most paid mentorship products have the opposite incentive structure (the mentor profits whether or not the student succeeds), which is why most paid mentorship products produce mediocre results. The lesson for serious retail traders: the high-quality mentorship is rarely the kind you can buy in a one-click checkout, and the structural alternative (joining a real prop firm that selects and trains traders) is worth considering for traders with the temperament for it.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Disclosure: This article is editorial and contains no affiliate links. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Lance Breitstein's performance figures are based on Trillium Trading's internal "Top Trader" rankings and his publicly disclosed back-to-back 8-figure years in 2020 and 2021; the specific dollar figures are reported through Chat With Traders interviews and Trillium's own communications rather than via SEC-style regulatory audit. Individual results vary significantly, prop trading is structurally different from retail trading (different capital, different leverage, different risk management framework), and Breitstein's results are not representative of typical trader outcomes at any firm.










