Awesome, sounds like a solid ass-f**king experience. Thanks for the input Realise1) Top your uni with straight HD's and the university medal.
2) Work 100 hour weeks at a big investment bank for 5 years until you want to kill yourself.
3) Apply for hedge fund and beat all the other people who completed step 1 and 2.
4) Don't sell other people's notes in the company unless you want to be sued into the stone age by your employer/colleagues.
tl:dr no fucking chance
Nah, think I might've picked it up whilst watching Forbes Billionaire a year back.Did you start watching Billions or something? BOS probably isn't the best to ask for advice regarding PE and hedge funds.
Well, I've seen the strategies implemented by many top hedgies to avoid crashes like these. While there were ofc some losses, it wasn't as major as what most people/banks/firms experienced. We'll seeGFC 2.0 is coming, as well as the inevitable collapse of the extremely inflated Australian housing bubble. I would imagine you would be out of a job the moment you step in. Perhaps even sued by your own firm for losing investor's money which is very likely (take a look at the dow jones, s&p 500, asx 200, etc).
Well this post shows you are 1) irrational and speaks without much thought and/or 2) unfamiliar with probability and markets. Your opinions of not being able to make money in both bear and bull markets shows a complete lack of knowledge. There is no 'proven' way to make money sure, but quite frankly I have no clue what you were trying to say. My point is that most traders going after bullish gains are kidding themselves by thinking they can guess percentage rises. What you are saying about gamblers fallacy has no point and basis. Dispute the reasoning behind making small losses by shorting commodities, indices etc over a long period of time, then banking it when a black swan event hits.Millions of mutual fund managers have tried to beat the market and failed, all of them skilled, educated and experienced. Thousands of books have been written by financial experts concluding that outperforming an index like the S&P 500 consistently over the long term is close to impossible. Economists have done experiments where monkeys can randomly pick out stocks better than hedge fund managers.
If you think you can make money in a bear market, you're either clueless or no different to the degenerate gamblers you see everyday at the casino.
Wow that's pretty cool, do you have a link where I can read more lolWell this post shows you are 1) irrational and speaks without much thought and/or 2) unfamiliar with probability and markets. Your opinions of not being able to make money in both bear and bull markets shows a complete lack of knowledge. There is no 'proven' way to make money sure, but quite frankly I have no clue what you were trying to say. My point is that most traders going after bullish gains are kidding themselves by thinking they can guess percentage rises. What you are saying about gamblers fallacy has no point and basis. Dispute the reasoning behind making small losses by shorting commodities, indicies etc over a long period of time, then banking it when a black swan event hits.
FYI the monkey experiment refers to a Monte Carlo generator whereby a time frame is run millions of times (e.g an army of ten million monkeys randomly hitting a typewriter where over thousands of reruns one is able to rewrite the Iliad word for word). I don't see how this is relevant at all.
Also jinxyy, I saw your post on the 'upcoming' GFC 2.0. Nice try, but again completely illogical. I think banks have better things to do than sue their own traders. Feel free to continue this discussion.
Wow that's pretty cool, do you have a link where I can read more lol
It sounds a little like the Bolzmann brain paradox thing
"You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to InteGrand again."
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• Infinite Monkey Theorem: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infinite_monkey_theorem
• Almost surely: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almost_surely