'An American Hedge Fund' Reviewed on DJ Newswire

Timmay 'the brutally honest' needs how many aliases?

Probably: theSorecer timvodas

No doubt: starterjohn, mike4242, GregShap01, and now volpri

They usually show up after he hits a brick wall with his little red trading wagon.
 
wow. can't believe i'm defending tim sykes (see my book review; in summary, the 'book' should be a 20 page interview as part of a larger book on younger traders, the title is terribly misleading, it's best suited for armchair trader cheerleaders instead of real traders), and i hate his spamming, BUT...

first, bob and others - CHNR was borrowable. i got some through IB on multiple days. i only got 1200 on the nice day, but they had 4 or 5000. i've since been told that other brokers had some as well, but not mine. similarly - just because "you" (generic) can't find something doesn't mean someone else can't find it.

second, tim sykes is likely not timvodas. there were a bunch of posts of his (vodas) where he (vodas) would simply cut and paste someone else's post, start a new thread with it, and go from there. it's a longtime variation on the internet pasttime of trolling.

in fact - just checking before i clicked submit - vodas' first post took a bob bright story, and made it tim's, which he "didn't appreciate this outright lie."

finally, to others - yes, the 'system' i suspect he's teaching on his DVDs is doable. it's been one in my arsenal for 7+ years, and i found out that others had been doing it before that, etc.
a real hedge fund (not sykes' friends and family fund) couldn't trade this way, because of the relatively small size involved.

now, is it risky? yup. is it REALLY risky for someone with a small account, who's already made a couple successful trades and doesn't have discipline and emotion down pat? sure - they'll break whatever rules he has in place (either ignoring a stop, or jumping in too early, or...) and take a devastating hit.


so, please...
1) CHNR was shortable. tough to find, but shortable.
2) sykes is NOT vodas.

thanks.
 
Quote from gaj:

first, bob and others - CHNR was borrowable. i got some through IB on multiple days. i only got 1200 on the nice day, but they had 4 or 5000. i've since been told that other brokers had some as well, but not mine. similarly - just because "you" (generic) can't find something doesn't mean someone else can't find it.

I'm not getting into a big thing here- snake oil sykes is NOT worth it. All I will say is "me" (generic) have some history with short selling and have cleared thru GS for many years. I'm on the phone with stock loan all the time, and CHNR has been absolutely, positively IMPOSSIBLE to borrow. And if they couldn't locate any for me, they had none to lend.

So maybe the biggest firm on the street (with the largest inventory of borrowable shorts) had none while others did..which does sound fishy..sounds like a Pinocchio story. Sounds like a snake oil sykes story.
 
Quote from EPrado:

You were being ridiculous saying things like "Pros like me love when retail guys place their stops....blah blah blah". Tim....you call yourself a hedge fund...perhaps legally you were...but in reality you were a guy trading a 2 million dollar retail account (nothing wrong with that...but quit acting like you were Stevie Cohen).

You say placing a stop at round numbers like 20.00 is stupid...that the stop should be placed at 20.03 ? Newsflash Timmay Cohen...the rookies who place these stops at 20.03 will almost definitely get hit at 20.03 when the stock trades 20.00....the round number stops get hit pushing out to the .03 and .05 stops. So the "rookies" will now get filled even worse following your advice.

Keep leading those lambs right off of a cliff.

I'm talking about investors protecting their gains during a run up before short sellers like me come in and hammer the stock down. When a stock runs up from $5 to $22, thousands of investors put their stops at $20, hoping to protect their gains, but when $20 gets taken out, there are so many stop losses there that they only sell their shares at $18 or $19 because the stocks drops that fast. If they put their stops at $20.03, they'd sell at $20 and save money. Understand?
 
Quote from gaj:

wow. can't believe i'm defending tim sykes (see my book review; in summary, the 'book' should be a 20 page interview as part of a larger book on younger traders, the title is terribly misleading, it's best suited for armchair trader cheerleaders instead of real traders), and i hate his spamming, BUT...

first, bob and others - CHNR was borrowable. i got some through IB on multiple days. i only got 1200 on the nice day, but they had 4 or 5000. i've since been told that other brokers had some as well, but not mine. similarly - just because "you" (generic) can't find something doesn't mean someone else can't find it.

second, tim sykes is likely not timvodas. there were a bunch of posts of his (vodas) where he (vodas) would simply cut and paste someone else's post, start a new thread with it, and go from there. it's a longtime variation on the internet pasttime of trolling.

in fact - just checking before i clicked submit - vodas' first post took a bob bright story, and made it tim's, which he "didn't appreciate this outright lie."

finally, to others - yes, the 'system' i suspect he's teaching on his DVDs is doable. it's been one in my arsenal for 7+ years, and i found out that others had been doing it before that, etc.
a real hedge fund (not sykes' friends and family fund) couldn't trade this way, because of the relatively small size involved.

so, please...
1) CHNR was shortable. tough to find, but shortable.
2) sykes is NOT vodas.

thanks.

Thanx, couldn't have said it better myself. It's funny how most traders really do believe they have the whole game figured out until a black swan, in this case being able to borrow CHNR, comes along
 
Quote from TimothySykes:

I'm talking about investors protecting their gains during a run up before short sellers like me come in and hammer the stock down. When a stock runs up from $5 to $22, thousands of investors put their stops at $20, hoping to protect their gains, but when $20 gets taken out, there are so many stop losses there that they only sell their shares at $18 or $19 because the stocks drops that fast. If they put their stops at $20.03, they'd sell at $20 and save money. Understand?
Okay, you're saying stock is at 22 then drops to 20.00?

So those with stops at like 20.00 or 19.98 would get filled at 19 or 18 whereas the one with stops at 20.03 might get filled at 20.00?

Well you're assuming that price will break down through 20.00. What happens if price hits support at 20.01 and moves back up? The one at 20.03 would be out while everyone else with stops at 19.98 would still be in the market.

You're only representing one possible outcome. Heck, might as well lock in your profits at 20.55 (or some other random number over 20) with that logic, b/c that will get filled before the break both 20.03 and 19.98.
 
Quote from dottom:

This doesn't make any sense whatsoever.

You're saying if 100 people had their sell stops at 20.00, and 1 person has a stop at 20.03, the 100 people would get filled at 18-19 whereas the 1 person would get filled at 20.00???

1. Doesn't make any sense. If the 20.00 stops trigger a selloff before it even gets 20.03, then the 1 person at 20.03 would not get filled at all. He'll still be long.

2. If the market moves slightly past 20.00 such that 20.03 gets triggered, the 100 people who had their stop at 20.00 would get filled (all things being equal) before the 1 who had it at 20.03. So if after moving past 20.03 the stock then tanks, the ones with stops at 20.00 would get a higher fill than the one at 20.03. Some of those with stops at 20.00 might even get filled higher than 20.00 in this case.

Wow talk about looking at the market form two different POVs--I only think in terms of stocks falling! I'm saying when the stock goes from $5 to $22 and then starts to retrace, how can longs protect themselves and sell their positions to capture as much of their gains as possible. If they go to work and put their stops at $20, they won't get executed anywhere near $20 because there's too many others at that exact point. Whereas if they learn to anticipate and beat the crowd at $20 by putting their stops a few cents above, they'll get taken out before the price drops quickly, like I've seen and profited from thousands of times.
 
Quote from TimothySykes:

Thanx, couldn't have said it better myself. It's funny how most traders really do believe they have the whole game figured out until a black swan, in this case being able to borrow CHNR, comes along

Pinocchio, still never told us which brokerage house allowed you to borrow the shares.
 
Quote from TimothySykes:

I'm talking about investors protecting their gains during a run up before short sellers like me come in and hammer the stock down. When a stock runs up from $5 to $22, thousands of investors put their stops at $20, hoping to protect their gains, but when $20 gets taken out, there are so many stop losses there that they only sell their shares at $18 or $19 because the stocks drops that fast. If they put their stops at $20.03, they'd sell at $20 and save money. Understand?


You are telling me that if they have a stop at 20.03 they will only have .03 sliipage...but if they use a 20.00 stop they will have 1.00 to 2.00 slippage? I find that hard to believe that a stock can change characteristics that quickly. Makes zero sense Tim.
 
Quote from TimothySykes:

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