1. Confirmation bias 2. Anchoring 3. Overconfidence 4. Availability 5. Status Quo Bias
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rss10 Rules For Success
1.Chase physical and mental energy
He graduated from Queens College, with a degree in communications and theater.
2.Find the torture you’re comfortable with
He developed an interest in standup comedy after brief stints in college productions.
3. Grab and hold people’s attention
After graduation from Queens College, he tried out at an open-microphone night at New York City’s Catch a Rising Star.
4. Relate to people
In his stand-up comedy career, he’s known for specializing in observational humor.
5. Enjoy getting older
He created The Seinfeld Chronicles with Larry David in 1988 for NBC.
6. Do your own thing
By its fourth season, Seinfeld had become the most popular and successful sitcom on American television.
7. Learn from your audience
After he ended his sitcom, he returned to comedy rather than continue his acting career.
8. Don’t care what others think
He was listed number 1 in the Forbes Highest-Paid Comedians for 2015.
9. Fall in love with your work
He’s the creator and host of the web series Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.
10. Be an amazing performer )
He’s an automobile enthusiast and avid collector, owns a large Porsche collection.
BONUS:
Do something different
Know yourself
Be loud and fast
A trading image
Images can be powerful. Here is one I particularly liked from Robert Koppel’s Bulls, Bears, and Millionaires (Dearborn Financial Publishing, 1997), p. 55, compliments of Timothy McAuliffe.
“You have to be prepared and disciplined whenever you walk on the trading floor. You also have to remind yourself that you’re just a fly on a rhino’s back, and the best you’re hoping for is a peaceful ride. If you get swell-headed, the tail’s going to get you. The trick is not to end up one dead fly!”
If you look at pictures of rhinos, their tails aren’t terribly long. So, however distasteful and ego-deflating it may be to think of yourself as a fly, the good news is that if you’re properly positioned you have a decent chance of surviving the ride.
All You Need To Know About Today's CME Bitcoin Futures Contract Launch
Following last week’s ‘successful’ launch of Cboe Bitcoin futures, CME will begin trading of their own ‘more institutional’ Bitcoin futures contract today.
Here are some of the differences between the products to be offered by the exchange operators.
CONTRACT UNIT
- The Cboe Bitcoin Futures Contract will use the ticker XBT and will equal one bitcoin.
- The CME Bitcoin Futures Contract will use the ticker BTC and will equal five bitcoins.
PRICING AND SETTLEMENT
- Both Cboe’s and CME’s bitcoin futures contracts will be settled in U.S. dollars, allowing exposure to the bitcoin without actually having to hold any of the cryptocurrency.
- Cboe’s contract will be priced off of a single auction at 4 p.m. Eastern time (2100 GMT) on the final settlement date on the Gemini cryptocurrency exchange.
- CME’s contract will be priced off of the CME Bitcoin Reference Rate, an index that references pricing data from cryptocurrency exchanges, currently made up of Bitstamp, GDAX, itBit and Kraken.
19 Quotes from the Book “Hedge Fund Market Wizards”
1. As long as no one cares about it, there is no trend. Would you be short Nasdaq in 1999? You can’t be short just because you think fundamentally something is overpriced.
2. All markets look liquid during the bubble (massive uptrend), but it’s the liquidity after the bubble ends that matters.
3. Markets tend to overdiscount the uncertainty related to identified risks. Conversely, markets tend to underdiscount risks that have not yet been expressly identified. Whenever the market is pointing at something and saying this is a risk to be concerned about, in my experience, most of the time, the risk ends up being not as bad as the market anticipated.
4. The low-quality names tend to outperform early in the cycle, and the high-quality names tend to outperform toward the end of the cycle.
5. Traders focus almost entirely on where to enter a trade. In reality, the entry size is often more important than the entry price because if the size is too large, a trader will be more likely to exit a good trade on a meaningless adverse price move. The larger the position, the greater the danger that trading decisions will be driven by fear rather than by judgment and experience.
6. Virtually all traders experience periods when they are out of sync with the markets. When you are in a losing streak, you can’t turn the situation around by trying harder. When trading is going badly, Clark’s advice is to get out of everything and take a holiday. Liquidating positions will allow you to regain objectivity.
7. Staring at the screen all day is counterproductive. He believes that watching every tick will lead to both selling good positions prematurely and overtrading. He advises traders to find something else (preferably productive) to occupy part of their time to avoid the pitfalls of watching the market too closely.
8. When markets are trending up strongly, and there is bad news, the bad news counts for nothing. But if there is a break that reminds people what it is like to lose money in equities, then suddenly the buying is not mindless anymore. People start looking at the fundamentals, and in this case I knew the fundamentals were very ugly indeed.
9. Buying low-beta stocks is a common mistake investors make. Why would you ever want to own boring stocks? If the market goes down 40 percent for macro reasons, they’ll go down 20 percent. Wouldn’t you just rather own cash? And if the market goes up 50 percent, the boring stocks will go up only 10 percent. You have negatively asymmetric returns.
10. If a stock is extremely oversold—say, the RSI is at a three-year low—it will get me to take a closer look at it.8 Normally, if a stock is that brutalized, it means that whatever is killing it is probably already in the price. RSI doesn’t work as an overbought indicator because stocks can remain overbought for a very long time. But a stock being extremely oversold is usually an acute phenomenon that lasts for only a few weeks. (more…)
Jesse Livermore Trading Rules :Written in 1940
3 Ways To Fail in Life & Trading
Muhammad Ali Parkinsons Center – No fight is won alone
Safe is risky.
How The World Really Works – Video
Renegade Economist’s “Four Horsemen” documentary lifts the lid on how the world really works. “Four Horsemen is a breathtakingly composed jeremiad against the folly of Neo-classical economics and the threats it represents to all we should hold dear.” Free from mainstream media propaganda — the film doesn’t bash bankers, criticize politicians or get involved in conspiracy theories. It ignites the debate about how to usher a new economic paradigm into the world which would dramatically improve the quality of life for billions. Since it is becoming abundantly clear that we will never return to ‘business as usual’, 23 international thinkers, government advisers and Wall Street money-men break their silence and explain how to establish a moral and just society.