Quote from Cutten:
There are several problems with the article - it doesn't say what his drawdowns were during the lifetime of the trade, doesn't explain if he had any stop or what his risk control was (e.g. if the bubble went 1 more year, would his fund have lost 10% or gone bust?), doesn't say what % of capital was allocated to the various bets. It avoids the most important information which was the risk/reward ratio on the trade. The point of an article like this should be to show how - if you had a similar idea - you would go about trading it, and what sort of returns you could achieve relative to your risk.
2nd rate journalism IMO.
Of course it´s 2nd rate journalism - as always you have to read between the lines...
Another important part of "the" trade :
The index weakened in the second half. By year end, the new Paulson Credit Opportunities Fund was up about 20%. Mr. Paulson started a second such fund.
How many traders do you know aggressively leveraging a position when resuming "the" trade ? George Soros and others made fortunes being "convinced" of certain assessments but also because they were aggressive and decisive in doing so !
Congrats to Paulson, btw !
