Top Trader: Jack D. Schwager
Published on Rabu, 27 Maret 2013
20.00 //
Top Trader
Jack D. Schwager first entered the market in 1971. Since then, he has
become a highly respected director of futures research and also a well
known profiler of investment greats – many of whom he met while trading
for Commodities Corporation. As a profiler, he has penned a number of
successful books, such as “Market Wizards” – a term that spawned a whole
Wall Street Wizard series – and also “Getting Started in Technical
Analysis.” He has since made his mark in the hedge fund industry where
he applies many of the lessons learned from his interviews and
successfully manages the Fortune Group's Market Wizards Funds.
Jack Schwager and Commodities Corporation are virtually synonymous. Not only did he work for this financial services corporation, but during his tenure he rubbed elbows with a number of investment and trading greats. He familiarized himself with the methods of Ed Seykota, Bruce Kovner, Louis Bacon and also Michael Marcus. After researching their methods and systems, Schwager came to the realization that trading profitably is not random success or the luck of the draw. While compiling his works on Wall Street trading and stock investing – the famous Market Wizards series comprised of “Market Wizards,” “New Market Wizards,” and “Stock Market Wizards” –
Schwager soon noted that savvy trading requires an intimate knowledge of human psychology. Moreover, methodical investing far surpasses kneejerk reactions to market ups and downs when trading.
In a 2003 interview, Jack Schwager revealed that successful stock traders must be disciplined and experienced money managers with an eye on controlling risk; they also must employ methodologies that are in tune with their individual personalities. This seasoned stock trader and author has come to learn that simply applying another investor’s systems or trading methods will not yield similar results, especially if this system does not fit the individual trader’s unique mental and intuitive approach to the stock market.
Jack Schwager opines on his takes on investment strategies and cautions readers not to get caught up in the details of other traders’ successes but instead maintain a steady eye on the underlying current that appears to be synonymous. As such, he cites that virtually all of the successful traders with whom he had a chance to speak would have a well defined ceiling for their position size when it came to the short side. This served as a failsafe and would not allow their portfolios to become unbalanced with a short position that went over a predetermined percentage.
It is Schwager’s take on the reason for so many fiscal losses – especially in recent months and years – that have elevated his books to cult status: with the help of copious interviews and meticulous comparison of facts and data, he suggests that loss prevention is equivalent to disciplined risk control. As such, he cautions traders to not just manage risk, but instead control it from the get go. Schwager urges traders to stay away from staying in a position past the point of reason and overtrading.
He believes that an attempt of regaining losses rather than cutting them leads to a lack of discipline when it comes to risk control, and as such losing investors and traders fail to see market conditions and declines which are obvious to others. Jack Schwager has taken all of the lessons learned from his interviewees and is now applying them to hedge fund management, which he considers to be a viable and profitable alternative to standard investing. Not surprisingly, today he manages the Fortune Group's Market Wizards Funds.
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