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Archive for September, 2010

Disappearing Into The Sky

September 11 2010 | 12:20 pm PDT

into.the .sky  300x120 Disappearing Into The Sky

When I lived in Manhattan I didn’t do any touristy things. I had gotten them out of my system when I was much younger because I had lived only about 1 hour north of the city then. Yet, several times a year I’d make my way up to the observation deck of the WTC. You were so high up, I swear you could see the horizon fall away from you as if you could see the earth begin to curve down. I can still see that image in my mind.

When I was about 12 years old, my uncle John took my mother, my sister, and me to Windows on the World for lunch. The restaurant was still pretty new then and the whole WTC was less than 10 years old. I can remember looking out the window to the streets below and thinking that the New Yorkers walking around looked smaller than ants and the taxis looked smaller than my MatchBox cars.

Many years later when I was well into my trading career, I’d meet my friends in lower Manhattan for lunch or after work for drinks. One day I was going to have a sushi lunch with my childhood friend TJ who had a large brokerage operation on the floor of the NYMEX. The day was very overcast and there were some low-hanging clouds. Not low like fog, but low so that they appeared to blanket Manhattan.

While I was waiting for TJ outside, I looked up the side of the North Tower — which up close was a massive and hulking presence — and it just disappeared into the sky. It was not going to take any sh*t from any low hanging clouds. I couldn’t see the antenna over the edge of the roof and I remembered being in awe of the building, the people who built it, the folks who worked there. And I remember it occurring to me that I was fairly insignificant in the whole scheme of things.

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Only 10 Seats Left For My Classes NYSSA on 9/21

September 09 2010 | 11:40 am PDT

There are only 10 seats left for the two courses I’m teaching at NYSSA (New York Society of Security Analysts – The CFA Chapter in Manhattan). These courses are NOT for beginners, however newer prop traders and day traders will garner great trading insight.

Using Commodities in a Diversified Portfolio discusses the impact that managed futures will have on a traditional portfolio when added to a client’s asset allocation. What happens to the Investment Frontier and what vehicles you can implement to meet your clients’ needs. I talk about almost all sectors traded at CME Group — grains, energies, financials, currencies, and stock index futures — within the context of a managed futures portfolio. This is the morning class and is considered an Intermediate level course at NYSSA.

In the afternoon class, Timing the Market with Commodity Trend Following Models, I’ll be covering marketing timing models using the S&P in one of the classes using data from public sources. I’ll show you how to build you own simple model by hand. The information you’ll learn can be applied to any other market and it will give you a deeper understanding (intellectually speaking) of what’s going on inside a mathematical trading model. This is considered an Advanced Course at NYSSA.

You can save $50 if you register for both. Registration is handled by the NYSSA – I don’t have anything to do with that. A wide array of talented folks from a diverse industry backgrounds have attended in the past and it’s a good place to network, as well as ask me questions in person. As a perpetual student myself, I’ve put these courses together so that the students feel that there is tremendous value for their tuition.

email me at editor [at] martinkronicle [dot] com if you have any questions. Registration questions should be directed to the NYSSA.

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Born Rich Documentary


bornrich 150x120 Born Rich Documentary

I think everyone who made the decision to be in this documentary probably regrets it. Granted they’re young, but some of them are pathetic and entirely clueless.

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Reminiscences of a Stock Operator Video Review

September 01 2010 | 1:32 am PDT

I have two versions of Reminiscences of a Stock Operator (Illustrated) Reminiscences of a Stock Operator Video Review, and I’ve read and re-read it more than a dozen times over the last 20 years.

For all the book’s wisdom, I’ve begun to wonder if Jesse Livermore is more Madoff or Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. than a hero to the trading community. All of the aforementioned are known market manipulators and as men, were less than scrupulous. Kennedy took a stroke and eventually died of natural causes, Livermore killed himself, and Madoff should.

I rather recommend you follow in the footsteps of an unknown trader who remained emotionally stable, produced consistent annual returns, and acted within the best ethical practices of the day. You have the letter of the law and the spirit of the law, and there’s a big difference spiritually between the two.

What are your thoughts? Do you forgive Livermore all his demons and poor choices? Do you really want to trade like Jesse Livermore? Email me in confidence if you want and we’ll get a discussion going on this.

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