How many of the 'Market Wizards' blew up?

Discussion in 'Professional Trading' started by Cutten, Jun 26, 2009.

  1. Humpy

    Humpy

    Since you mention Linda Raschke, here is a little of what you can find about her on google - seems to be alive and still spouting

    Trader Linda Raschke Provides Tips on Day-Trading S&P
    by Jim Wyckoff

    The S&P 500 futures market is a trading arena unto itself, which can accommodate many different trading styles, according to Linda Bradford Raschke, a well known trader, lecturer and president of LBR Group, Inc.

    “Not only does this market display a different daily profile than the other futures markets, but it has a much longer “length of line” (intraday swings), which offers more trading opportunities, she said. “Additionally, there is a wealth of information provided by many internal indicators on the equities market that some professionals like to monitor.”

    Raschke is a featured speaker this weekend at the 20th annual Technical Analysis Group (TAG 20) Conference here, sponsored by Telerate Seminars.

    Below, the longtime trader provides some tips on trying to be a successful S&P 500 day trader. “However, let me also say that the majority of the professional S&P day traders I know tend to specialize in just one pattern or trade just one style. This is definitely a market where overtrading can be a temptation.”
     
    #11     Jun 26, 2009
  2. she also gives some market commentary on:

    www.moneyshow.com

    in the videos section

    it's a FREE resource, a very important factor, at least for me, and you don't have to register. i think FREE is often better.

    i think she's not paranoid about the markets and that's good. likes horses, nature etc.
     
    #12     Jun 26, 2009
  3. MKTrader

    MKTrader

    On a semi-related note, Michael Jackson made more than any MW and has apparently left his loved ones with mountains of debt. Money management (including the personal kind) certainly is important...
     
    #13     Jun 26, 2009
  4. MKTrader

    MKTrader

    While she's ultimately a discretionary trader (from what I understand), she certainly uses many tools, patterns, indicators, etc. that may be "pseudo-scientific" to some. It's not as though she says "this pattern reminds me of my favorite Bach fugue..I think I'll go long in oil!" or something.
     
    #14     Jun 26, 2009
  5. I know from a senior fx guy that Bill Lipschutz blew up and has since then never recovered.


     
    #15     Jun 26, 2009
  6. you're right. i mean she is eclectic, and an open mind about various trading things

    it's not like it's 'i'm a turtle for the rest of my life and that's it'
     
    #16     Jun 26, 2009
  7. guys i suggest we leave michael jackson alone for a while, i mean the person has just left this world . ..

    let them figure out all this themselves
     
    #17     Jun 26, 2009
  8. well, sometimes it may be strict, like a bach fugue.

    more often like a jam session, probably . . . :D

    the point of connection here is a feeling of structure, probably

    but we would have to ask raschke if this helps her . . .

    i personally try to use tai chi to refine my intuition. it's good for relaxation, but it has not had any tangible effect on my trading yet
     
    #18     Jun 26, 2009
  9. then again, niederhoffer likes music, but he blew up.

    so there's no consistent pattern here. i don't think he's a composer though.

    i'm not saying: "any composer would make a good trader."

    i'm saying: "raschke is a composer and it probably helps her in her trading, because composers have a good sense of structure.
    if you understand various styles, probably eclectic is better. probably. you choose what to use here and now"

    i mean i don't know that there's a link to any profession here.

    victor sperandeo was a VERY successful trader and he has no formal education.

    i've read 'a mathematician plays the market', the most useless book i've ever read, even worse than schwager. it describes in painful detail a mathematician's failure in the markets.

    if it was about math, all mathematicians would've been rich

    so i guess i'm trying to say that psychology is very important in all this, and to have a real edge, you REALLY have to stay focused, and above all, centered, especially in this sentiment-driven market

    you know, morihei once said:

    Aiki is an inexhaustible fount of wisdom. it is the source of all the true knowledge contained in the world classics. but aiki is not something you can master in four or five years. it takes at least ten years to grasp the basics of aiki, and it is dangerous to foolishly strive for some grandiose experience that you think will render you instantly enlightened. never consider yourself an all-knowing master. you must always be training and studying with your students.
     
    #19     Jun 26, 2009
  10. I have heard somewhere in the past, maybe 10 years ago, than she run a fund with one big investor, I think from Asia. These people liquidated the fund after it had loses. I cannot be sure since I cannot find the information. Maybe others know more details. I would be interested in a comfirmation or discomfirmation of this story.
     
    #20     Jun 26, 2009
    joker542 likes this.