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What I Learned Losing a Million Dollars
- Lu par : Patrick Lawlor
- Durée : 7 h et 29 min
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Description
Tim Ferriss Book Club Selection
Jim Paul's meteoric rise took him from a small town in Northern Kentucky to governor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, yet he lost it all - his fortune, his reputation, and his job - in one fatal attack of excessive economic hubris. In this honest, frank analysis, Paul and Brendan Moynihan revisit the events that led to Paul's disastrous decision and examine the psychological factors behind bad financial practices in several economic sectors. This book - winner of a 2014 Axiom Business Book award gold medal - begins with the unbroken string of successes that helped Paul achieve a jet-setting lifestyle and land a key spot with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. It then describes the circumstances leading up to Paul's $1.6 million loss and the essential lessons he learned from it - primarily that, although there are as many ways to make money in the markets as there are people participating in them, all losses come from the same few sources.
Investors lose money in the markets either because of errors in their analysis or because of psychological barriers preventing the application of analysis. While all analytical methods have some validity and make allowances for instances in which they do not work, psychological factors can keep an investor in a losing position, causing him to abandon one method for another in order to rationalize the decisions already made. Paul and Moynihan's cautionary tale includes strategies for avoiding loss tied to a simple framework for understanding, accepting, and dodging the dangers of investing, trading, and speculating.
Also included is a bonus hour-long interview between co-author Brendon Moynihan and noted investor, business advisor, and best-selling author Tim Ferriss.
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- Cora Keegan
- 12/09/2015
There are better uses of your time
Would you recommend this book to a friend? Why or why not?
No, The guy claims he spent years on the floor of the Chicago exchange but has no war stories from then, except lucking on to the CME executive board because he wore a nice suit. Instead he relives his frat day in school and his his undeserved promotion in the Army. By contrast In Pit Bull Marty Swartz has some great stories of his trading days. In all those years Jim Paul had none? On day one in the pits every trader learns Stops are in Emotions are out. But in all those years he did not learn that, in fact he says he learned nothing in the pits he just rode the coat tails of better traders. He then lost a million dollars on a very stupid trade. Leveraged to the teeth and did not watch it. Then the book goes on to quote a bunch of business books (not trading books) and he rambles on about Coke buying Colombian pictures. He then says in books he could not find details on a good time/way to put on a trade, so he knows nothing about entering a trade, but he wants to tell you how to exit. His advice, have a plan that suits your style -- end of story what the heck does that mean? Well it turns out If you loose money you are an ego maniac with a bad plan and if you make money you are smart and have a plan?The book was written years ago so it is funny that he picks as an example Steve Jobs who he says is a looser with a big ego who failed at Next computer and Bear Sterns as great traders with the plan. Well we all know Jobs made a comeback with the iPhone and Bear Sterns blew up in 2008.
Has What I Learned Losing a Million Dollars turned you off from other books in this genre?
We are getting there
Was What I Learned Losing a Million Dollars worth the listening time?
No, not even close
Any additional comments?
There is no actionable advice here, just feel bad admonishment. The author has no real advice beyond, get a plan. There is no back-testing, no proof, he just (poorly) regurgitates other books many off topic. Chuck this book and read David Aronson - Evidenced Based Technical Analysis, John Murphy's Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets or a little lighter, Elder's Come Into My Trading Room. Also follow top blogs like "cme4pif Weekend Market Comment". All of these detail real signals to enter and exit the market and of course risk control.
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39 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- Philo
- 10/06/2015
Compendium of old-school (non-quant) trader lore
This book is actually a couple decades old. Anyone interested in this sort of thing ought to listen through at least one book like this. I like personally losing big as a centerpiece to the work: it wipes out that phony "I made a zillion dollars easy!" baloney. It seems to me that, with a basic arc of the story being, this writer was young and pretty clever and made a few moves and wound up with a lot of other people's money (and trust) in his hands, and proceeded to blow up, lose all the trading positions and get closed out. This story is told well (and more briefly) in a fave book of mine, Taleb's Fooled by Randomness. Here, there is a lot of color and detail of an earlier era, though of course the situations are not fundamentally different. A lot of terminology (including informal terminology) is described, plainly and well. And the author seemingly wanted to cram in any personal wisdom that might seem to sort of fit.
This book shows its age in some other ways. How about Steve Jobs presented as a guy who started clever, burned out, and wound up in some nowhere company making no profit? Oops, bad timing as the worst moment in his career was focused on, and the historical next chapter had not yet begun. But this is alright -- it reminds us how the supposedly smart declarations and prognostications of the writers of any time are bound to their own unavoidable limitations, and often seem quaint and bizarre later. That's one reason I read older books: to see what people got WRONG. So much for all of our fond assumptions, and that's the core message of this book.
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39 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- Amin
- 16/01/2019
Let me save you time - He learned nothing
Pure garbage.
Made a 1 or 2 hour introduction, literally beginning from 9 years old, and then how/ when he worked and what happened when he was 12,14,15,18,20,22 and on and on, sprinkling on top how popular he was with "the ladies", and how smart/wise he was by doing this instead of that.
I have not bought this book to learn about your whole life story, and to hear how much you like yourself. 5-10 minute introduction is ok, but when literally half of the book is about how good/smart/popular/ you are what's the point?
No wonder Tom Ferris endorsed this book, as it is as practical as all the work of Ferris.
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15 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- Scott Morris
- 08/11/2014
Surprisingly Good
What made the experience of listening to What I Learned Losing a Million Dollars the most enjoyable?
This book was a great listen. The author reiterates his experience which is very valuable for those reading.
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
Yes. The prinicples of losing a million dollars can be applied to many different areas in one's life surprisingly.
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15 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- Joseph
- 10/12/2019
I “learned” this book teaches the art of wasting time
The book can be summarized as follows, “when making an investment be sure that your order has an attached stop otherwise you’ll make the same mistake as me.”
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6 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- Jeremy
- 11/04/2016
Decent book worth the read
This book is an entertaining story, it appears it is beging to show the signs of time, it speaks of a the 60's - 90's and at the pace of today's world that feels like lifetimes ago. Well narrated. and a good lesson. However much of the book is just a man confessing he was a "right place right time" guy who lost it all because he never should have been there.
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6 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- Anthony
- 25/02/2016
View From The Other Side
I picked up this book when amazon offerered a two for one sale. I didn't think much of it as I chose to read the other book in my selection first. I chose this book because I thought it would be insightful to here a view from the otherside. So many books in my collection talk about the exuberance in the market and shed a positive light on it. What I got in this book was what I wanted, a much more darker view.
So many books, talk about how to make money. They talk about the risk of losing money, then leave it on the surface, never indulging in it This book indulges in the losses. In fact, it is all about the downside, which balances out all the exuberance of making money you probably had before reading this book.
What you get is an authentic personal account of someone who been the the proverbial trenches and back. You can ride that sucker all the way through. If an enjoyable story about the personal losses of other people is what you want, you should read this book. If you want a book that doesn't reconfirm your disgust for the arragant, pompus, jackasses on wallstreet, maybe don't read this book. Even though the author may be all those things, he is no idiot. He admits to them, and doesn't try to sugarcoat it. He is honest, and blatent about his mistakes, which is why this book is insightful.
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3 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- M. Leonard
- 14/02/2015
I was compelled to finish this book.
I thought of this book as a 3 star experience. I gave it 4 stars because I was compelled to listen to the entire performance, including the interview at the end. That means there is greater value in the story than what I cognitively believed. Good job.
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- James Ma
- 17/12/2021
What I learned losing a credit on this book.
That I should request for a refund. I kept asking myself:"Why am I listening this guy's childhood story? Why am I listening to his Army story?"
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2 personnes ont trouvé cela utile
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- J. Chisholm
- 09/07/2020
An essential book !
few books i have are worth having. This belongs on the shelf with Reminiscence of a stock operator. Anyone that is serious about there trading should kisten carefully to what is being said
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- Stephan P.
- 22/02/2022
Essential for those who want to keep their money
Learn how to take losses and the winners will come automatically.
The book is very entertaining as well as extremely informative and helpful.
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- Amazon Customer
- 07/11/2021
A few useful chapters, but too much biography
The advice and conclusions of this book are refreshingly honest. Unfortunately it is also biography/Interview for two people I don't know and don't care about.
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- mp
- 02/08/2021
good but repetitive
the book illustrates one main lesson:
"Success can be built upon repeated failures, when the failures aren't taken personally. Likewise, failure can be built upon repeated successes, when the successes are taken personally"
it does so by telling an entertaining story. in my view, it could be about 50% shorter without losing any content
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- Niklas
- 25/02/2018
More important than "How to get what you want"
There are as many ways to get successful as they're people that are trying it. But there are just a few ways of failing at it. This book describes this potential dangerous traps you can fall into on your way to the top and shows how to be prepared for them. Every "ambitious" and risk taking person should read it.
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