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JESSE LAURISTON LIVERMORE
Tuesday, 28 June 2011 22:52
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At the tender age of 14, Jesse Livermore saw the inside of Paine Weber & Company for the first time. As a lowly clerk in 1891, his job consisted in transcribing stock prices from ticker tape to an actual board. Guessing on various trades’ profitability on intuition, he began betting on actual stock trades, and at the age of 15 he earned his first $ 1,000. Jesse Livermore eventually left Paine Weber but continued to bet on stocks. By age 20 he managed to earn $ 10,000. When at the age of 21 he joined the New York Stock Exchange, however, he was not nearly as profitable trading stocks as he was betting on them. By the age of 22 he lost all of his money and had to request a loan to continue trading. At the age of 23 he started trading with $50,000 and at the end lost it all. Livermore blames the slow speed of the ticker for his fiscal demise. Over the course of the year, Jesse Livermore learned to rely more on his hunches than the ticker tape, and through a shrewd short sale in 1907 he makes $ 1 million. By 1908 he is once again broke. After a bankruptcy in 1914, Livermore returns to trading and in 1916 amasses $3 million. He continues trading and in 1929 once again anticipates the market and sells short, making a huge profit of $ 100 million, yet in 1934 he is bankrupt for a second time. Six years later, Jesse Lauriston Livermore dies by his own hand. Today’s stock traders look to Livermore as the quintessential, indomitable do it yourself millionaire who did not invest in costly courses or college educations, but instead learned stock trading on the job. As odd as his frequent wins and losses may sound, modern stock traders embrace the fact that hard work, intuition, and also a labor intensive study of the market can give virtually anyone the chance to realize a profit. Of special interest are his innate abilities to profit during the 1907 and then also 1929 crashes. This skill, if stock traders could apply it today, would have preserved many a trader’s portfolio. Another important aspect of Livermore’s trading philosophy was the lesson to not look to insider tips as a surefire means of reading the market. Jesse Livermore attempted to do so – to his detriment – a number of times, and as such the lessons of his life are a powerful teaching tool for new traders. Some have gone so far as to distill the lessons Jesse Lauriston Livermore taught them, and perhaps the most famous line is the one which encourages would-be traders to be in touch with their strengths but much more so with their weaknesses. Livermore’s legacy is one that counsels those who come after him to learn from their mistakes and realize that these mistakes are the opportunities for real learning. Successes, such as his multi million dollar trading profits, do not provide for real learning opportunities.
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