“I am deaf to the word “no”.”
“Think big, think fast, think ahead. Ideas are no one’s monopoly”
“You do not require an invitation to make profits.”
“If you work with determination and with perfection, success will follow.”
“Pursue your goals even in the face of difficulties, and convert adversities into opportunities.”
“We bet on people.”
“Meeting the deadlines is not good enough, beating the deadlines is my expectation.”
“Don’t give up, courage is my conviction.”
“We cannot change our Rulers, but we can change the way they Rule Us.”
My Hot Favourite quotes are :Number 1 ,6 and last.
Just comment if possible.
Updated at 28th August/Baroda
Archives of “invitation” tag
rssBook Review: No One Would Listen
This is a book about Harry Markopolos, who is the author of this book. He talks about how he attempted for years to expose the fraud that was Bernie Madoff.
The book takes the following form (from my view of how the author sees it):
- How he came to a quick conclusion that Bernie Madoff was a fraud.
- How he tried to convince others of that view, especially those that were feeding more money to Madoff.
- Two journalists took his side and wrote about Madoff in 2001 or so, but to no avail.
- Trying to come up with a similar strategy that would work, though it would return much less than Madoff’s supposed returns, and finding few would invest in it.
- Fruitless wranglings with the clueless SEC.
- Finally, in 2009, Madoff blows up.
- Vindicated, he talks to the media, Congress, and anyone who will listen.
- He excoriates the toothless SEC, and proposes better ways to root out financial fraud.
That’s the book in a nutshell. But stylistically, the book harps on how no one would listen. Well, duh. No one did listen, or the book would have been over sooner.
People are not Vulcans. They aren’t logical. Most don’t think; instead, they mimic. “If it works for him, it will work for me also.”
That was the case with Madoff. He maneuvered many sheep into position to be fleeced, and worse, they begged for the privilege to be his clients.
There were many red flags flying:
- No independent custodian
- No independent Trustee
- Small Auditor, incapable of auditing such an enterprise.
- Returns were too smooth for being so high.
- The asset size was to large for the markets supposedly employed.
- Even front-running profits would not be enough, were Madoff to do that.
- No profit motive. Other managers with lesser track records charged more.
- Marketing was by invitation.
- Investors were sworn to secrecy.
- And more, read the book. (more…)
CNBC: 'Anyone Who Owns A Suit Can Come On Television'
ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, NJ—Citing a need to provide quality programming 24 hours a day, CNBC has extended an invitation to anyone who owns a suit to drop by the financial news network and be a guest expert, cohost a show with Larry Kudlow, or do whatever. “Don’t worry about what kind of shape your suit is in,” said CNBC president Mark Hoffman, who explained that his network’s studio has an iron and some old phone books that people can press their jackets on. (more…)
Life Wisdom – Jim Rohn
Success is both a journey and a destination.
It’s the steady, measured progress toward a goal and the achievement of a goal.
Success is both an accomplishment and a wisdom that comes to those who understand the potential power of life.
It’s an awarenesss of value and the cultivation of worthwhile values through discipline. (more…)
7 Words for Traders
- Think risk first and profit second — Profitable traders view every potential and actual trade through the lens of risk or whether they are willing to truly accept the potential damage to their account as opposed to focusing on the potential reward of trades.
- Accept risk — Profitable traders truly accept the associated risks once they decide the potential reward is worth it. These traders understand that in order to win consistently they MUST experience controlled losses. They know that if they minimize losses and exercise patience with winners, they can reap incredible profits.
- Think more/Trade less – Profitable traders know that their profit on every trade lay in the short distance between their ears. They understand that the siren song of securities is an invitation to trouble much of the time. They spend more time assessing a security’s overall chart structure and identifying optimal transaction points rather than focusing on the physical activity of clicking an entry or exit.
- Stalkers — Profitable traders are disciplined and patient. They will pass up a good entry to wait for a great one.
- Decisive — Profitable traders make decisions. They know that as long as their decisions are framed properly (i.e. from a risk perspective), their first thought is generally the right one.
- Forgetful — Profitable traders have short memories. As we were told many years ago on a Wall Street trading desk, “If you have a losing trade, forget it quickly… the chance to profit is coming up. If you have a winning trade, forget it even more quickly… the chance to give up those profits is coming up… stay in the moment.”
- Group think — Profitable traders care little for any one trade. They know they have already taken steps to minimize the impact of any single trade. Instead they focus on groups of trades as groups are more indicative of their process… which is what’s really important.