Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Gems
With enough inside information and a million dollars, you can go broke in a year.
-- Warren Buffett
If youre not making a profit, then youre not in tune with the market.
-- Bill Williams
The first rule of trading is: don't get caught in a situation in which you can lose a great
deal of money for reasons you don't understand. -- Bruce Kovner
A losing trader is not going to want to transform himself. Thats the kind of thing winning traders do.
When a falling stock becomes a screaming buy because it cannot conceivably drop further,
try to buy it 30 percent lower. -- Al Rizzo
It is critical that we never disconnect equity investing from financial instrument investing.
Remember that in both cases the underlying instrument is valued as "the present value of its future returns discounted for risk." The difference with a growth stock is that investors temporarily forego receiving their present returns, preferring to reinvest them to gain an even higher rate of return some time in the future. As long as the perception is that the pie is getting bigger, it is better to be in equity because of its ability to grow bigger (something a bond does not have). But eventually the equity must "pay off" at this higher rater of return.
What makes this very confusing is that a stock never exists in the present.
It is always a bet on a future outcome. In an important way stocks only exist in the future, not in the present. This can set your head spinning, but it is deeply and fundamentally true. Practically, it turns out not to affect buy and sell decisions in any new way, but philosophically it is a biggie. -- Geoffrey Moore
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The public may boo me, but when I go home and think of my money, I clap.
-- Horace
When everybody starts looking really smart, and not realizing that a lot of it was luck, I
get scared. -- Raphael Yavneh
Good judgment is usually the result of experience, and experience frequently is the result
of bad judgment. -- Robert Lovell
There have been three great inventions since the beginning of time.
and central banking. -- Will Rogers
The measure of success is not whether you have a tough problem to deal with, but whether
it's the same problem you had last year. -- John Foster Dulles
The test of success is not what you do when you are on top.
bounce when you hit bottom. -- Gen'l George S Patton
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Talent will not: nothing is more common than unrewarded talent. Education alone will not: the world is full of educated failures. Persistence alone is omnipotent.
Wall Street's graveyards are filled with men who were right too soon.
-- William Hamilton
Spend at least as much time researching a stock as you would choosing a refrigerator.
-- Peter Lynch
In this game, the market has to keep pitching, but you don't have to swing.
there with the bat on your shoulder for six months until you get a fat pitch. -- Warren Buffett
Ladder of Achievement:
100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% I did. I will. I can. I think I can. I might. I think I might. What is it? I wish I could. I don't know how. I can't. I won't.
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Until the lens of experience focuses information, it does almost no good. No matter how
much the marketing machines of the Information Age would have us think otherwise, information by itself isn't power: knowledge is. And turning information into knowledge requires more time, experience, and effort than an afternoon spent starting at a screen full of facts. Information is passive. To make it knowledge, you need to assimilate it. Put it in context. Understand it. Knowledge streamlines and focuses our relationship with information. Knowledge helps us avoid information we don't want or need and leaves us with the stuff we can use. In an age in which endless amounts of bits and bytes are always available, it's a daunting task to spot the worthwhile stuff. It's easy for the Net to overwhelm us or lull us into the misconception that simply having access to something is as good as knowing it. -- Michael Penwarden
Sometimes it takes all my resolution and power of self-control to refrain from batting my
head against the wall. -- Joseph Conrad
Murphy's Law: If anything can go wrong, it will. Finagle's Law: If anything goes wrong, anything you do will only make it worse. A billion here, a couple of billion there -- first thing you know it adds up to be real money.
-- Everett M. Dirksen
What you don't know won't hurt you, but it may make you act pretty stupid.
-- Anon
Wisdom is knowing what to do next; skill is knowing how to do it; virtue is doing it.
-- David Start Jordan
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Certainly you can't fool all of the people all of the time.
fooling you. -- Anon
The man who lies to himself can be more easily offended than anyone.
-- Dostoevski
The market is never wrong and it cannot be defeated. It is selfless. It does not experience
feelings of victory or defeat. The market is a cold battlefield and its participants are engaged in a life-or-death battle against themselves. -- Josh Lukeman
Most of our so-called reasoning consists of finding arguments for going on believing as we
already do. -- J.H. Robinson
If you really are interested in getting enlightened, one way would be to go off to Tibet,
-- Bill Williams
crawl in a cave, and sit there meditating for thirty years. Another equally good way but much, much faster is to trade the S&P . . .
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The uncreative mind can spot wrong answers, but it takes a creative mind to spot wrong
questions. -- A. Jay
After you have done the best you can, to hell with it.
-- Joseph P. Kennedy
In 1936, British economist John Maynard Keynes gave the best description of the stock
market I've ever heard. He said stock market investors are like judges in a beauty contest. But the idea of this beauty contest is not to pick the prettiest girl, but rather to pick the girl that all other judges will think is the prettiest.
This simple metaphor is profound because it reveals the truth: For all of our study of the
economy and companies, it is subjective perception -- not objective reality -- that sets stock prices.
And it's perplexing because, as Keynes pointed out, all of the judges are fully aware of the
true nature of the contest and act accordingly. Each judge knows that he's a player in an fabulously complex game of psych and double-psych, an infinite regress of figuring out what the other guy is thinking you're thinking he's thinking you're thinking he's thinking, and so on and so on ... -- Don Luskin
The man who has to ask what a yacht costs has no business owning one.
-- J.P. Morgan
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If one only wished to be happy, this could be easily accomplished; but we wish to be
-- Montesquieu
happier than other people, and this is always difficult, for we believe others to be happier than they are.
When the chips are down, money counts more than religion.
-- John F. Kennedy
Life is not a matter of holding good cards, but of playing a poor hand well.
-- Anon
discounted by the relevant interest rate and adjusted for the marginal tax rate is to forget that people have burned witches, gone to war on a whim, risen to the defense of Joseph Stalin, and believed Orson Welles when he told them over the radio that the Martians had landed. -- James Grant
As an individual trader or investor, you must make up your own mind whether to join the
battle or stand aside until it is over. If you are joining the battle, choose sides carefully and limit the amount of resources you are willing to commit. It is better to plan ahead and anticipate when others will join the battle to turn the tide of the conflict. You know that if your market breaches a particular price level, others will be prompted to join the fray and turn the tide so the opposing side capitulates. Focus on the overall goal of why you are involved in the market in the first place. -- Dean Lundell
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On message boards:
If an individual with pathological ideation is surrounded by people who challenge the pathological position there will be a reasonable probability that the position will be re-evaluated, rejected and a healthier one put in place. However if the pathological position has external supports -- people who similarly hold that position -- there is often very little chance to have that position re-evaluated, let alone having it modified in a healthier way. This is why cults are so powerful an influence on their members. It seems that for many buying a stock is similar to joining a cult. Instead of being investors -- open, alert, considering all information concerning their holding -- they become cultists, cheering the stock in spite of negative data and wanting to kill the messenger who brought it. They find cult mates on Internet message boards and in a kind of ritualistic behavior, post wishful predictions like 'up 10% by next month' or 'big takeover coming.' These posts have nothing to do with fact, but by posting them the action itself serves to reassure them and other cultists that all is well and that they have done something in the service of the cult -e.g. the post and prediction. This is similar to primitive peoples who during a drought do a rain dance. It gives them something to do to validate their beliefs and it reaffirms the cultist hope. -- Jerome Silverman
Don't gamble. Take all your savings and buy some good stock and hold it til it goes up
then sell it. If it don't go up, don't buy it. -- Will Rogers
When everyone assumes, at least implicitly, that the market is an actuarial table, that the
past is inevitably prologue, and that common stocks, held over an extended period, will always produce higher returns than bonds--and at lower risk--then stocks inevitably will be priced to reflect that certainty. At that point, however, the certainty becomes that stocks will produce lower future returns, and at higher risk at that. -- John Bogle
It doesn't give A's for effort. It doesn't say, "Everbody is special, just in their own way". The stock market offers direct, quantitative confirmation of exactly how much of a loser you are.
In this business, you never stop learning. Let me put it another way. If you stop learning,
you're on your way to going out of business. Wall Street is a tough teacher but also a good teacher. If you have any weakness -- arrogance, laziness, stinginess, cowardice, procrastination -- the market will zero in on that weakness and make you pay dearly. -- Richard Russell
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Statistics are like bikinis. What they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital.
-- Aaron Levenstein
Most of us believe that money-making is a game that is played with forces outside
ourselves, forces such as the economy, the stock market, interest rates, the Fed, government policies, employment statistics and the like. But as you move along a spiritual path and begin to get a taste of the power of your invisible self, you discover that money-making is merely a game that you play with yourself. -- Wayne Dyer
If you think that all stocks can be characterized as BUY, SELL, or HOLD, you are
-- Bob Green
short-changing yourself. PASS is a legitimate category, and it is frequently the end result of stock research...
Banging your head against a wall uses 150 calories an hour. Is this kind of stuff [chat boards] helpful? Yeah, I guess, if your trading decisions are
usually made in a men's locker room right after half-price "kegger night." -- Gary Smith
Big success is not built on success. It's built on failure, disaster and catastrophe. It's about
learning to turn it around. -- Sumner Redstone
One of the best rules anybody can learn about investing is to do nothing, absolutely
nothing, unless there is something to do. Most people always have to be playing; they always have to be doing something. They can't just sit there and wait for something new to develop. I wait until there is money lying in the corner, and all I have to do is go over there and pick it up. I do nothing in the meantime. Even people who lose money in the market say, 'I just lost my money, now I have to do something to make it back.' No, you don't. You should sit there until you find something. -- Jim Rogers
You have to respect the market like you respect the sea. You can't control it all.
-- Michael Eggly
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Grandmasters rely on illogical thinking, but they call it the element of surprise. Generally
they start the game according to the rulebook, but then they make a move which is unexpected: It is illogical. This causes the game to go into uncharted waters. The winner is the one who navigates the new terrain the best. The more illogical a master's move seems, the bigger advantage he has, because his opponent becomes totally confused. The weak opponent thinks only inside the box. By the time the confused victim figures out what has happened, he is history ... Likewise, the markets prey on the confused trader who plays only by the established rules. The more unpredictable and chaotic a market is, the more a true master wins. He is able to transcend rules and logic to another level of understanding. -- Leonard Kreicas
Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach him to use the Net and he won't
bother you for weeks. -- Andrew Grove
Financial forecasting is like driving a car blindfolded with directions from a passenger who
is looking out the back window. -- Werner De Bondt
We are all swimming on an investment beach roiled by waves of noise. Be very careful you
don't mistake a line of rogue waves for the turning of the tide. -- William J. Bernstein
Even the most brilliant mathematical geniuses will never be able to tell us what the future
holds. In the end, what matters is the quality of our decisions in the face of uncertainty. -- Peter L. Bernstein
October. This is one of the peculiarly dangerous months to speculate in stocks in. The
others are July, January, September, April, November, May, March, June, December, August and February. -- Mark Twain
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Whenever you think you've found the key to the market, some SOB changes the lock.
-- G.M. Loeb
I divide the investing public into three distinct groups: Thrill Seekers, Guru Groupies, and
Prudent Investors . . . Thrill Seekers think that money is fun. They get a visceral rush from playing the markets. They are performance-oriented risk takers who seek aggressive returns . . . What Guru Groupies really want is what Charles Givens promised them in his best-selling book, Wealth Without Risk. Remember the old saying about how everyone wants to go to heaven but nobody wants to die? These investors believe they can get to investment heaven without taking any risk . . . Thrill Seekers and Guru Groupies believe they can beat the market with the right information or the right guru. Prudent Investors believe the market can beat them. -- Steve Moeller
Education is what you get when you read the fine print. Experience is what you get when
you don't. -- Arthur Levitt
Technical analysis provides ample opportunities to deceive yourself into seeing what you
want. -- Alexander Elder
The way to solve excessive speculation is not to restrict access to the markets. That
actually makes matters worse. The true problem with speculation is that people are stupid and they don't recognize that they're stupid, so they repeat the problem every 20 years. So the solution is education, understanding, and access to information. -- Peter Stern
The principles of successful stock speculation are based on the supposition that people will
continue in the future to make the mistakes that they have made in the past. -- T F Woodlock
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Now risk is a purely a qualitative function on a day-to-day basis. There's no corporate development that justifies a 30% or more intraday move, whether up or down. That is simply the measurement of risk being thrown out the window and qualified based on market psychology and herd, gang-tackle mentality. -- Scott Bleier
You know it's a bull market when readers start to ask what skills they need to trade for a
living. -- Gary Smith
Q:Before the herd starts moving, any opinions out there? A: With all due respect, you are the herd <g>.
-- Message board post
Every act of conscious learning requires the willingness to suffer an injury to one's
self-esteem. That is why young children, before they are aware of their own self-importance, learn so easily; and why older persons, especially if vain or important, cannot learn at all. -- Thomas Szasz
By the time I was 30 I had realized perhaps I didn't know ALL the answers. By the time I was 40 I had to admit I didn't even understand all the questions.
Potential .400 hitters in the stock market are falling short of their goal because growing
numbers of today's investors are sufficiently educated, sophisticated, and informed to block their way, just as batters capable of achieving a .400 average have fallen short of that goal since the old days because defending teams have developed sufficient skill to block their way. No successor to Peter Lynch has appeared on the scene, and even Warren Buffett's touch is not as magic as it used to be. -- Peter Bernstein
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Professionals trade with the dominant market group, while beginners try to forecast the
future. -- Alexander Elder
Investing is not a win-win game. It is a win-lose game. Everyone who plays the game is in
the stock market to win. They are not in the stock market to make the world a better place or to help your net worth. They are in the stock market to make as much money as they can for themselves. If you buy stock that a professional or a company insider is selling, only one of you will end up being right. -- Peter Siris
Becoming sloppy with stops and lazy in research are typical behaviors of a loser on a lucky
streak. -- Alexander Elder
Okay, so the web has been hyped to the pointy of absurdity by fanatical true believers, but
when you strip away the frenzied predictions of the digirati, you're still left with an inescapable fact: The Internet will change the relationship between consumers and producers in ways more profound than you can yet imagine. The Internet is not just another marketing channel; it's not just another advertising medium; it's not just a way to speed up transactions. The Internet is the foundation for a new industrial order. . . The Web is not about push; it's about suck. Online consumers can suck out of cyberspace whatever interests them and leave behind whatever doesn't . . . Make no mistake, the web will drive the last nail into the coffin of set prices. Customer ignorance--about prices and relative product performance--has been a profit center for many companies. But consumers are about to get much, much better informed--and the consequences will be awe inspiring . . . The Net is a noose for mediocrity. But it's a humongous springboard for products and services that are truly great and truly consumer-friendly. Consumers everywhere, stand up and cheer! -- Gary Hamel and Jeff Sampler
If you want to know what God thinks of money, just look at the people he gave it to.
-- Dorothy Parker
These online financial hootenannies are dangerous at best, and at worst the investment version of poisoned Kool-Aid . . . the most active message boards generally turn into giant cheerleading sessions that have little tolerance for anybody who dares to suggest that a company might be facing trouble. -- Herb Greenberg
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The easiest way for your children to learn about money is for you not to have any.
-- Katharine Whitehorn
When Barbary Pirates demand a fee for allowing you to do business, it's called 'tribute
money'. When the Mafia demands a fee for allowing you to do business, it's called 'the protection racket'. When the State demands a fee for allowing you to do business, it's called 'sales tax'. -- Jeff Daiell
They can position themselves perfectly, and they can return the ball just right. But when they trade, it is real tennis that they are playing against very skilled players, including professional players.
It is merely irony.
The Internet stock mania, however, is a bit like having crazy relatives who keep coming back to visit--and each time, their behavior seems more outrageous than before . . . The numbers are becoming so large in this latest Internet stock trading craze that it's hard to imagine that the money changing hands is real. It feels more like a big Monopoly game, complete with multicolored play currency. -- Tom Petruno
The roadrunner is a good metaphor for the momentum stock, and Wile E. Coyote for the
momentum investor. -- DbPhoenix
The safest way to double your money is to fold it over and put it in your pocket.
-- Kin Hubbard
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Long-run gains in economic efficiency have nothing whatsoever to do with the short-run
trend of securities prices. At the peak of every bull market, optimists justify the extreme valuations with panegyrics about the technological transformation of industry. Just think back to the 1920s, when people were saying that electric power, radio, and aviation would revolutionize the world economy. Those prophecies came true, but in 1929 the market crashed anyway. -- Martin Fridson
If you don't make money off of it, it had better be either a religious experience or a hobby.
-- Lance Cooper
I have enough money to last me the rest of my life, unless I buy something.
-- Jackie Mason
I'm always amazed at how people seem to think that selling is an irreversible decision and
that they can't repurchase a stock that they just sold. At times it can make very good sense to repurchase at a price higher than what you just sold at. Emotionally, however, it is very tough to do so since you are at some level admitting you made a mistake by selling in the first place. It's very difficult not to have an emotional reaction to repurchasing a stock at a higher price, but the best thing you can do is forget your prior actions and continue to follow a set methodology.
I was reading an article on something called "the endowment effect" which seems relevant
here. A professor gave half his class coffee mugs. He asked the half of the class that received the mugs to name a price they would be willing to sell it the mugs for to the other half of the class. He asked the other half of the class that did not get a mug to name a price they would be willing to pay. The average price that those who received a mug would be willing to sell for was consistently about twice what those that didn't receive a mug were willing to pay.
The conclusion is that once someone owns an object, be it a mug or a stock, they have a
vested interest in it and tend to place a higher value on it than they would if they didn't own it in the first place. This helps explain why so many buy-and-holders have a death grip on their stocks. Once you own something, human nature is to convince yourself that you did the right thing by buying it and, therefore, its perceived value becomes greater than it was when it was owned by someone else. -- David Barney
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The most important financial decisions, I now realize, often have precious little to do with
money. If you smoke, drink heavily, eat to excess and never exercise, you probably won't need that impressive retirement nest egg. If your only hobby is shopping, you will find it tough to be a good saver. -- Jonathan Clements
Has anyone done a study of when it is best to buy a sock that is going to split? A few posts back it looked like somebody thought it was better to buy after the split? Comments?
In general, I have found that it does not pay to buy a sock at all if, in fact, you know that it's going to split in the near future. And, while the price of a given sock may appear relatively inexpensive with a split, you should probably buy one at the pre-split price. Now, certainly we all know that virtually every sock splits at some time during its life cycle, and usually the ultimate timing depends on two primary variables: walking and wearing patterns of the owner, and frequency of washing. To wit, I usually walk without putting excessive pressure on the heel or undo emphasis on the ball of the foot. I've also tried less frequent washing, but while this factor does noticeably extend the life of a given sock, it does have obvious if not altogether repugnant side effects.
My best advice to you in your dilemma over sock splits would be to trim your toenails more
often, cutting in a straight line to avoid ingrown toenails. The big toe is of crucial importance here. You'll find that, over time, most sock splits have less to do with confidence on the part of the manufacturer's management, or even overall trends in the sock market, but instead with proper podiatric grooming on the part of the owner. -- "ChazDogz"
They are unsure because they really don't know what they are doing. They do not have a plan, a set of principles or rules, to guide them; therefore, they vacillate and can't make up their minds.
One of the definitions of insanity is doing the same thing time and time again, and
expecting a different result. By this definition many investors are insane. -- Jim O'Shaughnessy
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Just because the technology makes buying and selling easier (in some cases a lot easier), it
is as important as ever to carefully define your financial goals, to chose some practices that will help you reach those goals and to stick to them--even when it gets really tempting to point, click and trade just because it's so easy to do. -- Joel Dreyfuss
After 1960 the disaster of 1929-1934 seemed to be fading from the collective social
memory, and once again market players began to compete with each other in search of maximum returns. The mutual fund was all-powerful, as it is today. "Go Go" fund managers outgunned each other with successively more aggressive investment strategies. Technology (or what sounded like it) was the favorite impulse purchase of the day. By 1961 it became clear that concepts or even just words relating to "electronics" or "silicon" multiplied the market value of a company.
There were a host of "trons" such as Astron, Dutron, Vulcatron, and Transitron, and a number of "onics" such as Circuitronics, Supronics,Videotronics, and several Electrosonics companies. Leaving nothing to chance, one group put together the winning combination Powertron Ultrasonics. The prices commanded in the market by these companies was unbelievable.
The market declined slowly throughout the early part of the year, and by the end of May it cracked downward. Not surprisingly, the "tronics" stocks and other growth stocks took the lion's share of the beating. Boonton Electronics, for example, declined to $1.62 from its 1961 high of $24.5. -- Jacob Freifeld
The Alligator Principle is based on the way an alligator eats: the more the victim tries to
struggle, the more the alligator gets. Imagine an alligator has you by the leg; it clamps your leg in its mouth and waits while you struggle. If you put one of your arms in the vicinity of its mouth while fighting to get your leg free, it lunges and then has your arm and leg in its clutches. The more you struggle, the more the alligator takes you in.
So if an alligator ever gets you by the leg, remember that your only chance is to sacrifice
the leg and drag yourself away. Translated to market terms, the principle is when you know you are wrong, close your position! Don't rationalize, hope, pray, or anything else, just get out . . . don't change your position, hedge it, or anything else; just take the loss and get out! -- Victor Sperandeo
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Should you trust a stockbroker who's married to a travel agent? The real danger in the individual message boards is when the stock begins to fall--herd
mentality at its finest. At first the members tell each other how it is just a small correction ("The rocket ship will soon be blasting upward, just wait"). After a significant one-day loss, the tone gets even more emphatic ("How can the market actually be punishing this company--don't they know its worth twice this much?"). Around this time, people start the "I doubled my position today, what a bargain" posts. You can bet you'll find a number of posts blaming (take your pick) (a) the analysts that follow the company, (b) the market-makers, and of course (c) the shorts for the recent stock performance. Also, one of the leaders of the board will call the company and post a detailed transcript of the conversation where the CEO states that nothing is fundamentally wrong with the company, so on, and so forth. This usually brings on another wave of buying by the regular members of the message board, as they finally burn up their remaining funds, or even worse, go on margin--throwing good money after bad on a losing proposition.
By this time, all rationality is gone (along with a good bit of money) and despair begins to
set in. However, their pride won't let them admit the mistake they've made, cut their losses, and start looking for a better company to invest in--"Well, I don't actually lose any money if I don't sell so I'll just wait for the price to recover". -- "DPGurney"
His scholars went to the library, read books about fish, and then wrote their expositions The students were shocked when, after turning in their papes, the professor tore them up and threw them in the waste basket. When they asked what was wrong with the reports, the professor said, "If you want learn anything about fish, sit in front of a fish bowl and look at fish." -- William J O'Neil
There is an impressive and growing body of evidence demonstrating that investors and
speculators don't necessarily learn from experience. Emotion overrides logic time after time. -- David Dreman
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Personally, I think everybody who predicts the future with a straight face should be
required (by federal law) to change out of the business suit, wrap him/herself in a gypsy shawl, wear one of those pointed wizard's hats with a picture of a crescent moon on it, and make conjuring sounds over a crystal ball. That way, everybody would know exactly what's going on and how much credibility to give the answer. -- Robert N. Veres
Nobody knows anything. All of them -- the journalists, the commentators, the brokers, the
traders, the analysts -- are feeling their way in a blizzard, squinting through the snow, straining amid the white noise to make out the next trend or market movement or sizzling stock. They traffic in a strange, souplike mixture of facts and gossip and rumor, and while their guidance can be useful, they are just as often taken by surprise, faked out by the market's twists and turns, their piles of research and lifetime of learning suddenly rendered irrelevant. They talk to one another, milk one another, belittle one another, desperately searching for someone who knows just a little bit more about the stock that everyone will be buzzing about tomorrow. It is a mutual manipulation society that affects anyone with a direct or indirect stake in the market, which is to say nearly everyone in America. -- Howard Kurtz
In the first, it is ridiculed, in the second it is opposed, in the third it is regarded as self-evident.
The reason a lot of people do not recognize opportunity is because it usually goes around
wearing overalls looking like hard work. -- Thomas A. Edison
I take the making of these charcoal layouts very seriously. Too many novices wait until they
are on the canvas before trying to solve many of their problems. --Norman Rockwell
The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.
-- John Maynard Keynes
You do not have to be more intelligent than other traders -- only better disciplined.
-- Alexander Elder
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people to overestimate their knowledge, underestimate risks, and exaggerate their ability to control events. Does overconfidence occur in investment decision-making? Security selection is a difficult task. It is precisely this type of task at which people exhibit the greatest overconfidence. -- John R. Nofsinger
A man found a cocoon of a butterfly. One day a small opening appeared. He sat and watched the butterfly for several hours as it
struggled to force its body through that little hole.
Then it seemed to stop making any progress. It appeared as if it had gotten as far as it
could, and it could go no further.
So to help the butterfly he took a pair of scissors and snipped off the remaining bit of the
cocoon.
The butterfly then emerged easily. But it had a swollen body and small, shriveled wings. The man continued to watch the butterfly because he expected that, at any moment, the
wings would enlarge and expand to be able to support the body, which would contract in time.
Neither happened! In fact, the butterfly spent the rest of its life crawling around with a
swollen body and shriveled wings.
It never was able to fly. What the man in his kindness and haste did not understand was that the restricting cocoon
and the struggle required for the butterfly to get through the tiny opening were nature's way of forcing fluid from the body of the butterfly into its wings so that it would be ready for flight once it achieved its freedom from the cocoon.
Sometimes struggles are exactly what we need in our lives. If we were allowed to go
through our lives without any obstacles, it would cripple us.
We would not be as strong as what we could have been. We could never fly!
--Anon via Joe Scott
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