Showing posts with label hedge fund. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hedge fund. Show all posts

The Billion Dollar Mistake: Learning the Art of Investing Through the Missteps of Legendary Investors Review

The Billion Dollar Mistake: Learning the Art of Investing Through the Missteps of Legendary Investors
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I gave it three stars. It was a good book, but not as good as it could have been. How could it have been better?
First, though the introduction indicates that the author had access to many of the investors profiled, there are precious few statements in the investors' own words about what THEY THINK about their mistakes. It seemed like most of the book was just culled from newspaper accounts.
Second, I don't know specifically how the author could have avoided this (admittedly, it's the point of the book I suppose), but I'm uncomfortable with the idea of the guy on the sidelines employing 20/20 hindsight to critique the missteps of the guy who was actually in the arena. A great book called the Halo Effect makes the compelling case that so much supposed business analysis is simply ex post narration of what happened as though it was inevitable (if a new product works, they were bold and smart, if it fails, they "strayed from their core competencies"). For instance, in the Cooperman chapter, Cooperman is criticized for playing in an inefficient market with little information. But that's the whole point: homeruns are found in inefficient markets where no one is looking. If he had been right, we'd all say he was a genius. I guess what I'm saying is that I resist the notion that there is always some folly or brilliance at work in a given investment.
Although I'm skeptical that each mistake can be distilled down to pithy truths as the book implies, I still think it's worth reading. The biographical backgrounds in each chapter are interesting and inspiring to any aspiring investor, and the reader will gain insights into how each investor approaches investing generally, even if that's a more complicated thing than a few bullet points can convey.

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High-Performance Managed Futures: The New Way to Diversify Your Portfolio (Wiley Finance) Review

High-Performance Managed Futures: The New Way to Diversify Your Portfolio (Wiley Finance)
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I want to thank Mark Melin for writing this important book on managed futures. As a futures trader and broker I have a strong interest in the government regulated professionally managed futures asset class. After reading numerous academic papers on the importance of using non-correlated assets to best create the most effective Risk vs Reward long term portfolio, it was interesting to learn that managed futures are the most non-correlated of the asset classes. Mr Melin shows that even other generally non-corrleated assets to equities can become very correlated at market or economic dislocation when the non-correlation is most important. What is interesting is that at just such times the non-correlation of managed futures has stood out.
I have read many papers and books on managed futures and I find that this book is the most through and comprehensive, covering all the issues that an investor or financial advisor needs to understand this important asset class including:
*Investor protection based on the very strict Government Regulations that make Managed Futures so much safer than other HedgeFunds
*The topic of diversification is critical but where he gets into the nuts and bolts of the industry discussing volatility and correlation is where the book really shines
*Why differentiating between volatility on the upside and volatility on the downside better measures what investors are really concerned about as well as giving a better sense of how well the Managed Fund advisor handles adversity
*Why, as professionals understand, working out the risk issues first along with preparation for all eventualities is more important than just looking at returns
*Why diversifying even within the Managed Futures allocation between markets, methods and time frames is paramount and that once done the returns will almost take care of themselves
*How to evaluate Managed Futures Advisors and how to understand their disclosure documents
*And what I found most important and generally not covered elsewhere is how to actively manage the account once it has been established including the graphic tools to determine that the investment is not straying from the parameters that were used to establish the position.
This is a must read for anyone considering managed futures and those working to develop uncorrelated portfolios...


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The Other Side of Wall Street: In Business It Pays to Be an Animal, In Life It Pays to Be Yourself Review

The Other Side of Wall Street: In Business It Pays to Be an Animal, In Life It Pays to Be Yourself
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I confess I didn't know who Todd Harrison was when I got this book. I'd been to Minyanville a few times and I thought that the iconic stock market characters Hoofy and Boos were fun. As a former finance professor turned trader who develops his own ideas, I wasn't likely to be receptive to his slender volume of reminiscences.
Instead, I was surprised and enthralled by the story of Todd's life starting with being brought up in a fractured family where his grandfather became his surrogate father. After a brief adolescent interlude with his estranged father, the story moves rapidly to the college years at Syracuse and thence to being a clueless entry-level hire at Morgan Stanley.
Clueless or not, he rapidly learns and builds relationships to become a star options and derivatives trader, first at Morgan, then at Galleon and finally at Cramer-Berkowitz. I found this book engrossing and impossible to put down as I read about his rapidly increasing financial rewards and his equally rapidly increasing cognitive dissonance and conflicts.
The writing is very straightforward and linear but along the way we learn about Todd's grandfather Ruby, his father's demons, Jim Cramer, September 11th and finally his journey from writing for the Street to putting together Minyanville.
This book reminds me a little of "Reminiscences of a Stock Operator". Both are slender volumes but Harrison's book is much more open about revealing his conflicts and demons. Maybe if Jesse Livermore could similarly have used writing as method of self-discovery his life might not have ended in suicide.
Could this all be a con? Could he be selling us a bill of goods as self-justification? I suppose so - but somehow I think not. I think we have actually been granted an honest insight into what it is to be Todd Harrison.

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Minyanville Mediafounder and former hedge fund honcho Todd Harrison shares amazing untold stories from Wall Street's hidden side. From the adrenaline rush of trading at Morgan Stanley, to trench warfare with Galleon and Jim Cramer to valuable lessons about money and life, Harrison provides unforgettable tales from the most tumultuous era in financial history!As seen on Bloomberg Television's "Taking Stock."

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An American Hedge Fund: How I Made $2 Million as a Stock Operator & Created a Hedge Fund Review

An American Hedge Fund: How I Made $2 Million as a Stock Operator and Created a Hedge Fund
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I really do not like giving negative comments, but after reading the book and having been an active trader for over 6 years, I KNOW this book will not help anyone in their trading or yearning for insight or knowledge. I do not believe Tim is a very good trader, but was able to take advantage of a special time in history to accumalate great returns. He tries to argue that its the regulations of the hedge fund industry that hindered his ability to raise funds and hence limit his success. After getting stuck in a very bad Investment (not trade)his limited capital prevented him from taking advantage of other trades.........Well that was the blessing.

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$2 trillion is invested in the hedge fund industry, and yet, due to industry regulations, the general public knows little about them. This book will change everything. Timothy turned $12,000 of Bar Mitzvah gift money into $1.65 million trading thousands of stocks from 1999-2002, managed the #1 Short Bias Hedge Fund from 2003-2006, starred in the television documentary Wall Street Warriors, and appeared regularly on CNBC all before the age of 26. It's been a wild ride. This `Rocky'-like story is the first realistic look at the world of stock trading and hedge funds-it will educate and inspire everyone.

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The Stock Market Philosopher: Insights of a Soviet-Born, New York-Bred Hedge Fund Trader Review

The Stock Market Philosopher: Insights of a Soviet-Born, New York-Bred Hedge Fund Trader
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Interesting book to read. Being from former soviet union myself, I read fantiki part with some nostalgic memories. There is nothing original about what Gennady wrote - all is on the net, what is interesting is that he combined some of the major financials cliche in one book, which is not big, and dispelled them very cleverly. The book was fun to read, and thanks to NYC Subway delays :), I read it in few trips.
I day trade futures, and lost all financial naivete a long time ago, but majority still holds it. The current financial crisis might (just might not will) change things around. Books like this one need to be promoted because an average person can read it, enjoy it and what is most important understand its concepts, and as a result make better financial decisions. The publisher and author should do a better job in promoting it. I accidentally saw the preview in Futures magazine and thus bought it.
The only thing I wish Gennady went into is his experience in algo trading, but that would make the book very interesting for someone like me, and boring for many others.

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