轻仓 2007-7-19 01:35
Jesse Lauriston Livermore
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Jesse Lauriston Livermore"p}W)JP,u
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Jesse Lauriston Livermore (July 26, 1877 - November 28, 1940), also known as Boy Plunger,[1] was a notable early 20th century stock trader. He was famed for making and losing several multi-million dollar fortunes and short selling during the stock market crashes in 1907 and 1929.
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[edit] Overview
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Born in South Acton, Massachusetts, Jesse Livermore started his trading career at the age of fifteen. He ran away from home with his mother's blessing to escape a life of farming his father wished him to have. He then began his career by posting stock quotes at the Paine Webber brokerage in Boston.:v1RD#D8g5s/[3_L
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While working, he would write down certain hunches he had about future market prices, which he would check for accuracy later. A friend convinced him to put in his first money trade. He risked $5 and made $3.12 in profit from his first trade from Burlington stock.[2] With these humble beginnings, he began trading for himself.K\
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At the age of fifteen, he had earned profits of over $1000 (a significant amount of money in the early 1890s). In the next several years, he made his money at bucket shops. These were places where people would enter trades, but no actual trades were executed; they were betting against the house. Most people would lose money to the bucket shops because of fluctuations in stocks that would wipe out their slim margins. Livermore would regularly beat the bucket shops and was eventually banned from them. He then devoted his energies towards trading in legitimate markets. This change would lead him to devise a new set of rules to beat the market.
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During his lifetime, Livermore gained and lost several multi-million dollar fortunes. Most notably, he was worth $3 million and $100 million after the 1907 and 1929 market crashes, respectively. He subsequently lost both fortunes. Apart from his success as a securities speculator, Livermore left traders a working philosophy for trading securities that emphasizes increasing the size of one's position as it goes in the right direction and cutting losses quickly.
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Ironically, Livermore sometimes did not follow his rules strictly. He claimed that lack of adherence to his own rules was the main reason for his losses after making his 1907 and 1929 fortunes.j(WV@$hD0H
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The popular book Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, by Edwin Lefevre, reflects many of those lessons. Livermore himself wrote a less widely read book, "How to trade in stocks; the Livermore formula for combining time element and price". It was published in 1940, the same year he committed suicide.?7J^kT`0Q7IX
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A contrary view of Livermore's life is provided by Paul Sarnoff. Sarnoff says that Livermore was a hype merchant and that many of his brilliant successes were gross exagerations. He states that Livermore did not in fact make much money during the 1929 crash as he was heavily hedged. He accuses Livermore, at the end of his career as being little better than a tout.[3]
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