rss

The Wisdom of Paul Tudor Jones

Here are some noteworthy quotes from the 80′s (yes 80′s) PBS special “Trader“, highlighting Paul Tudor Jones and his partner Peter Borish’s trading strategies. I’d like to thank Rodrigo for sending me this special, as I wasn’t familiar with Jone’s career. Even after a decade in the business you can still keep learning from successful traders in the hopes of fine tuning one’s craft.

What I found refreshing about Jones is his commitment to helping underprivileged high school students and his pledge to pay for their college education as long as they complete high school. And more importantly, the giving of his time each and every week to intervene in their lives.

“If life ever ceases to be an educational experience, I probably wouldn’t get out of bed.”

When the headlines are extremely negative day after day and the market refuses to go down, it’s “telling a different story than what the headlines are.” When the markets sell off in the morning and are bought up in the afternoon, it’s a sign of quite accumulation.

“After awhile size means nothing. It gets back to whether you’re making 100% rate of return on 10k or 100 million dollars. It doesn’t make any difference.”

“Trading requires an energy level, and it’s very difficult to sustain it 24 hrs a day, which is what this requires. To do the job right requires such an enormous amount of concentration that you’ve got to be able to…it’s physical and emotionally mandatory to find some time to relax, and you’ve got to be able to turn it off like that.”

“The whole world is simply nothing more than a flow chart for capital.” (more…)

Wireless Electricity is the future

WIRELESS

I’ve talked about a coming tech boom that could be related to wireless electricity. Nobody really knows exactly when that will happen except that it could be 5-10 years away. Well, it could be even sooner that that. Much sooner.

Read more here:

Electronics such as phones and laptops may start shedding their power cords within a year.

That’s the prediction of Eric Giler, CEO of WiTricity, a company that’s able to power light bulbs using wireless electricity that travels several feet from a power socket. (more…)

Self-Assessment

* How many of your trades today (or this week) had an explicitly defined risk and reward?

* How many of your trades today (or this week) did you execute according to the defined risk and reward?

* How many of your trades today (or this week) were based upon clear market patterns and a clear identification of how the market was trading?

* How many of your trades today (or this week) were placed out of fear of missing a move? Out of frustration following a loss? Out of boredom in a slow market?

* How many of your trades today (or this week) would you place again if you had the same circumstances?

* How many of your trades today (or this week) came from advance planning and preparation?

* How many of your trades today (or this week) were sized properly, given your level of confidence in your ideas and your desired risk management?

* What did you learn today (or this week), and how will you put that learning to work tomorrow (or next week)?

* How did you feel about your trading at the end of the day (or week)? Proud? Disgusted? Regretful? Satisfied?

* What can you do tomorrow (or next week) to feel proud of and satisfied with your trading?

Lifestyle & Improvement

  • Make 2011 your best year ever (Paints With Numbers)

  • A guide to inner peace (Zen Habits)

  • What would you do if you knew you were going to die today? (James Altucher)

  • Don’t have enough time to do the things you want? 80 ways to steal back time (Open)

  • 10 tips for re-energizing your day, every day (Open)

  • Don’t forget your daily dose of aspirin (Bloomberg)

  • 32 ways to love ourselves (James Altucher)

11 More Trading Resolutions for 2011

  1. I will begin each trading day by asking myself, “Is today a day to make money, limit losses, or do nothing? And then I will trade that way.
  2. I will be aware of my fear and recognize when I’m trading out of fear.
  3. I will stay objective by asking myself, “If I had no position on, what would I do?”
  4. I will listen to myself first and others second, or not at all.
  5. I will trade to make money, not to be right.
  6. I accept that how often I’m right is not as relevant as how much I make when I’m right vs. how much I lose when I’m wrong.
  7. I will manage my risk better by following this simple formula: H+W+P=E (Hoping + Wishing + Praying = Exit the trade).
  8. I will lose money the right way—by using stops.
  9. I will quantify the success of my trade based on the quality of my trading process and not on the profit or loss from it.
  10. I will keep my trades simple. Trading is a game of up, down and sideways. It isn’t complicated, so don’t make it that way.
  11. Finally, I will keep a trading journal.

 

Go to top