Hedge Fund Market Wizards How Winning Traders Win by Jack D. Schwager - Audiobook and PDF (Total size 502.6 MB Contains 8 files)
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Fascinating insights into the hedge fund traders who consistently outperform the markets, in their own words
From bestselling author, investment expert, and Wall Street theoretician Jack Schwager comes a behind-the-scenes look at the world of hedge funds, from fifteen traders who've consistently beaten the markets. Exploring what makes a great trader a great trader, Hedge Fund Market Wizards breaks new ground, giving readers rare insight into the trading philosophy and successful methods employed by some of the most profitable individuals in the hedge fund business.
- Presents exclusive interviews with fifteen of the most successful hedge fund traders and what they've learned over the course of their careers
- Includes interviews with Jamie Mai, Joel Greenblatt, Michael Platt, Ray Dalio, Colm O’Shea, Ed Thorp, and many more
- Explains forty key lessons for traders
- Joins Stock Market Wizards, New Market Wizards, and Market Wizards as the fourth installment of investment guru Jack Schwager's acclaimed bestselling series of interviews with stock market experts
A candid assessment of each trader's successes and failures, in their own words, the book shows readers what they can learn from each, and also outlines forty essential lessons―from finding a trading method that fits an investor's personality to learning to appreciate the value of diversification―that investment professionals everywhere can apply in their own careers.
Bringing together the wisdom of the true masters of the markets, Hedge Fund Market Wizards is a collection of timeless insights into what it takes to trade in the hedge fund world.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Guest review of Hedge Fund Market Wizards, by Stanley Druckenmiller
Jack Schwager's newest book, Hedge Fund Market Wizards, like his previous works, is yet another solid contribution toward how to effectively manage capital. The book will have strong appeal to three main audiences; those managing capital professionally, those evaluating professional money managers, and those readers who want to manage their own money more effectively.
The fact that markets and the money management industry have gone through tumultuous change makes the central message of the book all the more powerful...that the key ingredients to successful performance are timeless and true in radically different environments. Those ingredients, an appreciation for the balance of risk versus reward in a trade, discipline, adaptability, an open mind, and intellectual honesty that enables one to learn from mistakes, come to life in Schwager's riveting interviews with a number of managers.
The characters' stories highlight their very different personalities and lifestyles and are interesting in and of themselves. But it is Schwager's unique ability to illustrate their winning strategies and interweave their personal backgrounds and emotional highs and lows that makes Hedge Fund Market Wizards both a highly entertaining read and learning experience. What most jumps out at the reader is how radically different styles and approaches all share the common traits mentioned above. By exemplifying these traits in a number of managers with seemingly different investment philosophies, whether it be short term vs. long term trading, large capital or small, or technical vs. fundamental analysis, Schwager is able to better highlight their essential importance to successful investing. By highlighting their differences, the common thread of their similarities is much more evident. Schwager reinforces the message with succinct summaries of what these commonalities are throughout the book.
Whether a reader is a professional money manager or simply managing their own capital, I have no doubt they will find Hedge Fund Market Wizards both entertains and enhances their ability to grow their capital.
Stanley Druckenmiller founded Duquesne Capital Management, which compounded at 30% per annum without a single losing year from its inception in 1981 to its closing in 2010. From 1988 to 2000, he also served as Lead Portfolio Manager of the Quantum Fund and Chief Investment Officer of Soros Fund Management (1989-2000) where he had overall responsibility for funds with a peak asset value of $22 billion.
Jack Schwager's Five Market Wizard Lessons
Jack Schwager Hedge Fund Market Wizards is ultimately a search for insights to be drawn from the most successful market practitioners. The last chapter distills the wisdom of the 15 skilled traders interviewed into 40 key market lessons. A sampling is provided below:
1. There Is No Holy Grail in Trading
Many traders mistakenly believe that there is some single solution to defining market behavior. Not only is there no single solution to the markets, but those solutions that do exist are continually changing. The range of the methods used by the traders interviewed in Hedge Fund Market Wizards, some of which are even polar opposites, is a testament to the diversity of possible approaches. There are a multitude of ways to be successful in the markets, albeit they are all hard to find and achieve.
2. Don't Confuse the Concepts of Winning and Losing Trades with Good and Bad Trades
A good trade can lose money, and a bad trade can make money. Even the best trading processes will lose a certain percentage of the time. There is no way of knowing a priori which individual trade will make money. As long as a trade adhered to a process with a positive edge, it is a good trade, regardless of whether it wins or loses because if similar trades are repeated multiple times, they will come out ahead. Conversely, a trade that is taken as a gamble is a bad trade regardless of whether it wins or loses because over time such trades will lose money.
3. The Road to Success Is Paved with Mistakes
Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater, the world's largest hedge fund, strongly believes that learning from mistakes is essential to improvement and ultimate success. Each mistake, if recognized and acted upon, provides an opportunity for improving a trading approach. Most traders would benefit by writing down each mistake, the implied lesson, and the intended change in the trading process. Such a trading log can be periodically reviewed for reinforcement. Trading mistakes cannot be avoided, but repeating the same mistakes can be, and doing so is often the difference between success and failure.
4. The Importance of Doing Nothing
For some traders, the discipline and patience to do nothing when the environment is unfavorable or opportunities are lacking is a crucial element in their success. For example, despite making minimal use of short positions, Kevin Daly, the manager of the Five Corners fund, achieved cumulative gross returns in excess of 800% during a 12-year period when the broad equity markets were essentially flat. In part, he accomplished this feat by having the discipline to remain largely in cash during negative environments, which allowed him to sidestep large drawdowns during two major bear markets. The lesson is that if conditions are not right, or the return/risk is not sufficiently favorable, don't do anything. Beware of taking dubious trades out of impatience.
5. Volatility and Risk Are Not Synonymous
Low volatility does not imply low risk and high volatility does not imply high risk. Investments subject to sporadic large risks may exhibit low volatility if a risk event is not present in the existing track record. For example, the strategy of selling out-of-the-money options can exhibit low volatility if there are no large, abrupt price moves, but is at risk of asymptotically increasing losses in the event of a sudden, steep selloff. On the other hand, traders such as Jamie Mai, the portfolio manager for Cornwall Capital, will exhibit high volatility because of occasional very large gains-not a factor that most investors would associate with risk or even consider undesirable-but will have strictly curtailed risk because of the asymmetric structure of their trades. So some strategies, such as option selling, can have both low volatility and large, open-ended risk, and some strategies, such as Mai's, can have both high volatility and constrained risk.
As a related point, investors often make the mistake of equating manager performance in a given year with manager skill. Sometimes, more skilled managers will underperform because they refuse to participate in market bubbles. The best performers during such periods are often the most imprudent rather than the most skilled managers. Martin Taylor, the portfolio manager of the Nevsky Fund, underperformed in 1999 because he thought it was ridiculous to buy tech stocks at their inflated price levels. This same investment decision, however, was instrumental to his large outperformance in subsequent years when these stocks witnessed a prolonged, massive decline. In this sense, past performance can sometimes even be an inverse indicator.
Review
"A must-read for all would-be traders...while the book's focus is clearly on trading and investing, there is more than enough human interest on offer for the general reader.... Like Schwager's other works...Hedge Fund Market Wizards looks set to become a classic." (Money Week, June 2012)
"Offers valuable guidance and timeless insights for both investment professionals and market enthusiasts looking to improve their trading abilities by learning from the best." (trade2win.com, July 2012)
"This book is destined to be a classic just like the others by Jack. But the latest goes one step further, these traders aren't just at the top of their game, they have defined it. What can I say? This book was so good it almost made me want to get back into the game again!"
―Paul Wilmott, mathematician and ex-hedge fund manager
"Brilliant! Brilliant! Brilliant! Another book about true traders by a true trader. Jack Schwager has become the official author of traderdom for this and future generations. Not only does Hedge Fund Market Wizards deserve a spot in every respectable trader’s book collection, but the entire series should be read annually by both professional and aspiring traders. Timeless wisdom, priceless concepts!"
―Peter Lewis Brandt, Futures Trader, Stableford Asset Management, and Author of Diary of a Professional Commodity Trader
"I read Jack Schwager's first Market Wizards book when I was just starting out as in investor more than 20 years ago. It put into brilliant focus the importance of trading psychology and knowing thyself. His latest work is yet another masterpiece. It brings to light new concepts in the world of investing that apply to all investors in today's markets. Anyone who reads this work will immeasurably enrich themselves on many levels because trading is life and life is trading."
―Dr. Chris Kacher, Founder of www.SelfishInvesting.com, and Author of Trade Like an O'Neil Disciple
Author Jack Schwager seems to have built his career on the market wizardry of others. Based on this fourth wizard book―interviews with 15 hedge-fund managers who recount their careers and strategies―Schwager's long experience with wizardry has served him well. Readers captivated by the hedge-fund mystique won't be disappointed. Readers looking for insight into exactly how successful hedge-fund managers achieve success will have plenty to chew over. Schwager attempts to boil down the interviews into 40 "Market Wizard Lessons." Examples: Value investing works. Position size can be more important than entry price. Sometimes it's useful to do nothing. But the one that may ring truest is this: There is no Holy Grail in trading. What works for one may not work for another, or for you. Fortunately for us, there's a wide enough variety of portraiture in Hedge Fund Market Wizards that at least a few lessons should resonate.
―Barrons.com
“Determining how great traders acquire and use their special skills has been an elusive quest. We have no shortage of cookbooks on how to trade, but only a limited number of books describe the decision processes of those who speculate as a profession. Trader confessionals exist often as testimonies to egos, but few focus on the details of decision making. Material that does successfully capture the essence of how speculators think is the Market Wizards series by Jack D. Schwager…. Even in the interviews of well-known traders, Schwager’s probing questions extract many new insights.”
―FAJ Book Review
“Even in the interviews of well-known traders, Schwager’s probing questions extract many new insights. The Ed Thorp interview, which is the longest, is almost worthy of a book in itself.”
―CFA Institute review
From the Inside Flap
What makes a great trader? For years, financial industry expert Jack Schwager has picked the brains of remarkable individuals who have consistently beaten the markets to find out the answer. Now, in Hedge Fund Market Wizards: How Winning Traders Win, he talks with some of the world's greatest hedge fund experts, highlighting the lessons to be learned from each so that you can apply their wisdom to your own trading.
Over the past few decades, hedge funds have become an increasingly popular investment vehicle, but their explosive growth has made trading more competitive than ever. In Hedge Fund Market Wizards, Schwager shares with readers the invaluable lessons he learned from the fifteen traders profiled, which include some of the industry's legendary figures, each of whom has compiled an exemplary return-to-risk record.
From the founder of the world's largest hedge fund to a manager going it alone, the traders interviewed in this book approach their field in radically different ways. But each of them has brought new and unique insights and developed distinct strategies that have allowed them to outperform the markets again and again.
Just as he did in his previous bestsellers, Market Wizards and The New Market Wizards, Schwager asks the questions that get to the core of what makes a successful trader tick. Distilling forty essential lessons to be learned from the market luminaries it profiles, Hedge Fund Market Wizards offers valuable guidance and timeless insights for both investment professionals and market enthusiasts looking to improve their trading abilities by learning from the best.
From the Back Cover
Praise for HEDGE FUND MARKET WIZARDS
"Traders regularly use passages and chapters from Schwager's books as a reference for their own methods and to guide their own trading. His work is an inseparable part of the consciousness and language of trading itself. Schwager's books are essential reading for anyone who trades, wants to trade, or wants to pick a trader."―From the Foreword by Ed Seykota
"Jack Schwager is the era's premier chronicler of financial talent. When historians look back at this mad time and wonder who the key players were, they will turn to Schwager's books."
―Robert R. Prechter, Jr., Editor, The Elliott Wave Theorist
"Hedge funds have evolved into a market force, and the timing of Hedge Fund Market Wizards is as valuable as the lessons it contains. Jack's book excels in knowledge and insight, rather than specific rules that are short-lived. Among the gems are mistakes are the catalyst for improvement, stable returns are suspicious, and you can't succeed without embracing the risk inherent to your trading style. As you would expect, the book is masterful."
―Perry J. Kaufman, Managing Director, Kaufman Analytics, Ltd., and author of New Trading Systems and Methods
"Great traders are almost always fascinating human beings. Jack Schwager is the perfect interviewer, equally adept at eliciting life stories and professional secrets. A must-read."
―William Poundstone, author of Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street
About the Author
JACK D. SCHWAGER is a recognized industry expert on futures and hedge funds, and the author of a number of widely acclaimed financial books. He is currently the co–portfolio manager for the ADM Investor Services Diversified Strategies Fund, a portfolio of futures and FX managed accounts. He is also an advisor to MarkeTopper Securities, an India-based quantitative trading firm. Previously, Mr. Schwager was a partner in the Fortune Group, a London-based hedge fund advisory firm that specialized in creating customized hedge fund portfolios for institutional clients. His prior experience also includes over twenty years as a director of futures research for some of Wall Street's leading firms.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Hedge Fund Market Wizards
How Winning Traders Win
By Jack D. Schwager, Ed Seykota
John Wiley & Sons
Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-118-27304-3
Excerpt
CHAPTER 1
Colm O'Shea
Knowing When It's Raining
When I asked Colm O'Shea to recall mistakes that werelearning experiences, he struggled to come up with anexample. At last, the best he was able to do was describe atrade that was a missed profit opportunity. It is not that O'Shea doesn'tmake mistakes. He makes lots of them. As he freely acknowledges, he iswrong on at least 50 percent of his trades. However, he never lets amistake get remotely close to the point where it would provide a goodstory. Large trading losses are simply incompatible with his methodology.
O'Shea is a global macro trader—a strategy style that seeks to profitfrom correctly anticipating directional trends in global currency, interestrate, equity and commodity markets. At surface consideration, a strategythat requires participating in directional moves in major global marketsmay not sound like it would be well suited to maintaining tightlyconstrained losses, but the way O'Shea trades, it is. O'Shea views histrading ideas as hypotheses. A market move counter to the expecteddirection is proof that his hypothesis for that trade is wrong, and O'Sheathen has no reluctance in liquidating the position. O'Shea defines theprice point that would invalidate his hypothesis before he places a trade.He sizes his position so that the loss from a move to that price level islimited to a small percentage of assets. Hence, the lack of any good warstories of trades gone awry.
O'Shea's interest in politics came first, economics second, andmarkets third. His early teen years coincided with the advent ofThatcherism and the national debate over reducing the government'srole in the economy—a conflict that sparked O'Shea's interest in politicsand soon after economics. O'Shea educated himself so well in economicsthat he was able to land a job as an economist for a consultingfirm before he began university. The firm had an abrupt opening foran economist position because of the unexpected departure of anemployee. At one point in his interview for the position, he was askedto explain the seeming paradox of the Keynesian multiplier. Theinterviewer asked, "How does taking money from people by sellingbonds and giving that same amount of money back to people throughfiscal spending create stimulus?" O'Shea replied, "That is a really goodquestion. I never thought about it." Apparently, the firm liked that hewas willing to admit what he did not know rather than trying to bluffhis way through, and he was hired.
O'Shea had picked up a good working knowledge of econometricsthrough independent reading, so the firm made him the economist forthe Belgian economy. He was sufficiently well prepared to be able touse the firm's econometric models to derive forecasts. O'Shea, however,was kept behind closed doors. He was not allowed to speak to anyclients. The firm couldn't exactly acknowledge that a 19-year-old wasgenerating the forecasts and writing the reports. But they were happy tolet O'Shea do the whole task with just enough supervision to make surehe didn't mess up.
At the time, the general consensus among economists was that theoutlook for Belgium was negative. But after he had gone throughthe data and done his own modeling, O'Shea came to the conclusionthat the growth outlook for Belgium was actually pretty good. Hewanted to come up with a forecast that was at least 2 percent higherthan the forecast of any other economist. "You can't do that," he wastold. "This is not how things work. We will allow you to have one ofthe highest forecasts, and if growth is really strong as you expect, we willstill be right by having a forecast near the high end of the range. There isnothing to be gained by having a forecast outside the range, in whichcase if you are wrong, we would look ridiculous." As it turned out,O'Shea's forecast turned out to be right, but no one cared.
His one-year stint as an economist before he attended universitytaught O'Shea one important lesson: He did not want to be an economicconsultant. "As an economic consultant," he says, "how youpackage your work is more important than what you have actually done.There is massive herding in economic forecasting. By staying near thebenchmark or the prevailing range, you get all the upside of being rightwithout the downside. Once I understood the rules of the game, I becamequite cynical about it."
After graduating from Cambridge in 1992, O'Shea landed a job as atrader for Citigroup. He was profitable every year, and his trading lineand responsibilities steadily increased. By the time O'Shea left Citigroupin 2003 to become a portfolio manager for Soros's Quantum Fund, hewas trading an exposure level equivalent to a multibillion-dollar hedgefund. After two successful years at Soros, O'Shea left to become a globalmacro strategy manager for the multimanager fund at Balyasny, aportfolio that was to be the precursor for his own hedge fund,COMAC, formed two years later.
O'Shea has never had a losing year. The majority of his trackrecord, spanning his years at Citigroup and Soros, is not available forpublic disclosure, so no precise statements about performance can bemade. The only portion of this track record that is available is for theperiod at Balyasny, which began in December 2004, and his currenthedge fund portfolio, which launched in June 2006. For the combinedperiod, as of end of 2011, the average annual compounded net returnwas 11.3 percent with an annualized volatility of 8.1 percent and aworst monthly loss of 3.7 percent. If your first thought as you read thisis "only 11.3 percent," a digression into performance evaluation isnecessary.
Return is a function of both skill (in selecting, implementing, andliquidating trades) and the degree of risk taken. Doubling the risk willdouble the return. In this light, the true measure of performanceis return/risk, not return. This performance evaluation perspective isespecially true for global macro, a strategy in which only a fraction ofassets under management are typically required to establish and maintainportfolio positions. Thus, if desired, a global macro manager couldincrease exposure by many multiples with existing assets under management(i.e., without any borrowing). The choice of exposure willdrive the level of both returns and risk. O'Shea has chosen to run hisfund at a relatively low risk level. Whether measured by volatility(8.2 percent), worst monthly loss (3.7 percent), or maximum drawdown(10.2 percent), his risk metrics are about half that of the average forglobal macro managers. If run at an exposure level more in line with themajority of global macro managers, or equivalently, at a volatility levelequal to the S&P 500, the average annual compounded net returnon O'Shea's fund would have been about 23 percent. Alternatively, ifO'Shea had still been managing the portfolio as a proprietary account,an account type in which exposure is run at a much higher levelrelative to assets, the returns would have been many times higher forthe exact same trading results. These discrepancies disappear if performanceis measured in return/risk terms, which is invariant to theexposure level. O'Shea's Gain to Pain ratio (a return/risk measuredetailed in Appendix A) is a strong 1.76.
I interviewed O'Shea in London on the day of the royal wedding.Because of related street closures, we met at a club at which O'Shea wasa member, instead of at his office. O'Shea explained that he had chosento join this particular club because they had an informal dress code. Weconducted the interview in the club's drawing room, a pleasant space,which fortunately was sparsely populated, presumably because mostpeople were watching the wedding. O'Shea spoke enthusiastically as heexpressed his views on economics, markets, and trading. At one pointin our conversation, a man came over and asked O'Shea if he couldspeak more quietly as his voice was disrupting the tranquility of theroom. O'Shea apologized and subsequently dropped his voice level tolibrary standards. Since I was recording the conversation, as I do for allinterviews—I am such a poor note taker that I don't even make theattempt—I became paranoid that the recorder might not clearly pick upthe now softly speaking O'Shea. My concerns were heightenedanytime there was an increase in background noise, which includedother conversations, piped-in music, and the occasional disruptivebarking of some dogs one of the members had brought with him.I finally asked O'Shea to raise his voice to some compromise levelbetween his natural speech and the subdued tone he had assumed. Themember with the barking dogs finally left, and as he passed us, I wassurprised to see—although I really shouldn't have been—that it was thesame man who had complained to O'Shea that he was speaking tooloudly.
* * *
When did you first become interested in markets?
It was one of those incredible chance occurrences. When I was 17, I wasbackpacking across Europe. I was in Rome and had run out of books toread. I went to a local open market where there was a book vendor, and,literally, the only book they had in English was Reminiscences of a StockOperator. It was an old, tattered copy. I still have it. It's the only possessionin the world that I care about. The book was amazing. It broughteverything in my life together.
What hooked you?
What hooked me early about macro was ...
No, I meant what hooked you about the book? The book hasnothing to do with macro.
I disagree. It's all there. It starts off with the protagonist just reading thetape, but that isn't what he developed into. Everyone gives him tips, butthe character Mr. Partridge tells him all that matters, "It's a bullmarket."
That's a fundamental macro person. Partridge teaches him that thereis a much bigger picture. It's not just random noise making the numbersgo up and down. There is something else going on that makes it a bullor bear market. As the book's narrator goes through his career, hebecomes increasingly fundamental. He starts talking about demand andsupply, which is what global macro is all about.
People get all excited about the price movements, but theycompletely misunderstand that there is a bigger picture in which thoseprice movements happen. Price movements only have meaning in thecontext of the fundamental landscape. To use a sailing analogy, the windmatters, but the tide matters, too. If you don't know what the tide is,and you plan everything just based on the wind, you are going to end upcrashing into the rocks. That is how I see fundamentals and technicals.You need to pay attention to both to make sense of the picture.
Reminiscences is a brilliant book about the journey. The narrator startsout with an interest in watching numbers go up and down. I started outwith an interest in politics and economics. But we both end up in a placethat is not that far apart. You need to develop your own marketexperience. You are only going to fully understand what the traders inyour books were saying after you have done it yourself. Then yourealize, "Oh, that's what they meant." It seems really obvious. Butbefore you experience it and learn it, it's hard to understand.
What was the next step in your journey to becoming a traderafter reading Reminiscences?
I went to Cambridge to study economics. I knew I wanted to studyeconomics from the age of 12, well before my interest in markets. I wantedto do it because I loved economics, not because I thought that was apathway to the markets. Too many people do things for other reasons.
What did you learn in college about economics that wasimportant?
I was very lucky that I went to college when I did. If I went now, Ithink I would be really disappointed because the way economics iscurrently taught is terrible.
Tell me what you mean by that.
When I went to university, economics was taught more like philosophythan engineering. Since then, economics has become all about mathematicalrigor and modeling. The thing about mathematical modeling isthat in order to make problems tractable, you need to make assumptions.Assumptions then become axiomatic for the entire subject—not becausethey are true, but because they are necessary to get a solution. So, it iseasier to assume efficient markets because without that assumption, youcan't do the math. The problem is that markets aren't efficient, but thatfact is just conveniently ignored.
And the mathematical models can't include the unpredictableimpact of speculators, either.
That's right. Because once you introduce them, you have a mathematicalmodel that can't be solved. In the current world of economics, mathematicalrigor is valued above all else. It's the only way you will get yourPhD; it's the only way you will get a career in academia; it's the only wayyou will get tenure. As a consequence, anyone I would call an economisthas been moved out of the economics department and into history,political science, or sociology. The mathematization of economics hasbeen a disaster because it has greatly narrowed the scope of the field.
Do you have a favorite economist?
Keynes. It's a shame that Keynesianism in the United States has becomethis weird word whose meaning is barely recognizable.
That's because in the United States, people apply the wordKeynesianism to refer to deficit spending, regardless of whetherit occurs in an economic expansion or contraction.
That's not what he said.
I know that. Although he certainly would have favored deficitspending in 2008 and 2009, he would have had a very differentperspective about deficit spending in the expanding economythat prevailed in previous years.
Yes, Keynes was a fiscal conservative.
I'm curious as to your views regarding the critical dilemma thatcurrently faces the United States. On one hand, if deficits areallowed to go on, it could well lead to a catastrophic outcome.On the other hand, if you begin substantially cutting spendingwith current unemployment still very high, it could trigger asevere economic contraction, leading to lower revenues andupward pressure on the deficit.
The argument for fiscal stimulus is a perfectly coherent, logical case. Thecounterargument that we should cut spending now is also a perfectlyrational case. But both sides are often expressed in totally irrational ways.I think the biggest mistake people make is to assume there is an answerwhen, in fact, there may not be a good answer.
I actually had the same perception after the 2008 presidentialelection. I thought the economy had been so mismanagedbetween the combination of exploding debt and a postbubblecollapse in economic activity that there might not be anysolution. The American humor newspaper, the Onion, capturedthe situation perfectly. Their headline after Obama was electedwas, "Black Man Given Nation's Worst Job."
All solutions that will work in the real world have to embrace the factthat the U.S. is not as rich as Americans think it is. Most politicalsolutions will be in denial of that fact. The relevant question is: Whichdifficult choice do you want to make?
Did you know what you wanted to do when you were inuniversity?
Yes, become a trader. Although looking back at it, at the time, I didn'tquite know what that meant.
What was your first job after graduating?
I got a job as a junior trader at Citigroup in the foreign exchangedepartment. My first week at work was the week when the pound waskicked out of the ERM.
The Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM), which was operative in the decadesprior to the implementation of the euro, linked the exchange rates of Europeancurrencies within defined price bands. The U.K. was forced to withdraw from theERM in 1992 when the pound declined below the low end of its band.
The week when George Soros in the popular vernacular "brokethe Bank of England"?
Yes. As you may know, I worked for George Soros before starting my ownfund. My favorite George Soros story concerns an interview with ChancellorNorman Lamont, who stated that the Bank of England had £10billion in reserve to defend the pound against speculators. George apparentlywas reading an account of this interview in the next morning's paperand thought to himself, "d10 billion. What a remarkable coincidence!—that'sexactly the size of the position I was thinking of taking."
At the time, I remember explaining to the head of the trading floorwhy the pound would not leave the ERM. I argued that it would bepolitical suicide for the conservative government to drop out of theERM; hence they would make sure it didn't happen.
(Continues...)Excerpted from Hedge Fund Market Wizards by Jack D. Schwager. Copyright © 2012 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Excerpted by permission of John Wiley & Sons.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : John Wiley & Sons; 1st edition (May 29, 2012)
- Language : English
- Ebook : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1118273044
- ISBN-13 : 978-1118273043
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