http://elitetrader.com/vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=105045
There's a thread from that time that mentions he was short these puts. We can verify approximately the price they were trading at. In any case according to Wikipedia, his investors still ended up in the end. So while shorting premium and eventually biting the big one as all premium sellers do, he is a model for money management.
Matador had a final return of 89% over 6 year: IRR of 11%. Given the volatility it's pretty terrible, but for a premium seller going into the financial crisis it's not bad.
The previous fund did better because he was able to avoid the blow up for longer, but again his investors ended up okay (aside from the volatilty)because he gave back so much capital.
He's overrated however. There are many guys who are more consistent with similar amounts of capital. John Paulson (before his 2008 jackpot) was a consistent 20%er and he never blew up.
There's a thread from that time that mentions he was short these puts. We can verify approximately the price they were trading at. In any case according to Wikipedia, his investors still ended up in the end. So while shorting premium and eventually biting the big one as all premium sellers do, he is a model for money management.
Matador had a final return of 89% over 6 year: IRR of 11%. Given the volatility it's pretty terrible, but for a premium seller going into the financial crisis it's not bad.
The previous fund did better because he was able to avoid the blow up for longer, but again his investors ended up okay (aside from the volatilty)because he gave back so much capital.
He's overrated however. There are many guys who are more consistent with similar amounts of capital. John Paulson (before his 2008 jackpot) was a consistent 20%er and he never blew up.