Scroll down on the navigation on the right to "Full episode 3". http://www.mojohd.com/video/?sid=8&eid=1
The website has third episode on it. "Your bigest worry will be fending off marriage proposols" - priceless they way he talked to the woman, no shame.
The only thing that made Tim come off as an amateur was trading in his house robe, and "looking" like he just rolled out of bed and started trading, with little preparation. As for his emotion, I don't see a problem with that. Nearly every trader does that once in a while....I'm one who prefers to let out my frustration and cuss at my screen when I'm in a bad losing position. Marty Schwartz does the same thing. On the other side, you have the PTJ type who can take a punishment and not even let it get to him. Finally, he has made and kept serious money from trading the markets, an accomplish most on here only dream about. For that alone, he deserves some respect.
Well...1.33 M AUM...with all the due respect for a guy of his age...hardly a whiz..."The ultimate goal is to provide annual profits"...worth alone a leading role on the show... http://www.barclaygrp.com/cgi-bin/b...srrsroov/_top?prog_id=25106505&was_searched=y
I believe we're all in agreeance on this. Great Luck to Tim but don't pound your chest as a "hedge fund" then bitch and moan about trying to land investors when you have to pull a shirt out of your laundry for a meeting with one. Whatever happened to "The Analyst" Jill, from the first episode?
that introduction for her was so fucking retarded. They didn't tell us what she did or anything about her, they just repeated a zillion times that she was retired.
Looks like it was just six pisodes. Our hero Timmy got an honorable mention in the NYTimes. He may not get any 'investors' out of this but one can always market past success start a daytrading office and recruit newbies like our other hero Don...emphasis on 'past' <i>This fall, the high-definition cable TV network INHD ran âWall Street Warriors,â a six-episode series documenting the lives of financial professionals. Among those featured was Timothy K. Sykes, a voluble 25-year-old hedge fund manager who made more than a million dollars off his bar mitzvah money.</i>
He's 25, and already made and kept a million in the market. That is quite an accomplishment, especially since he did it with a retail account.