Actually, I think that interview might be phony. There are some strange inconsistencies in it. I think it was actually made up as a "what if" interview by the author.
Quote from Darvas Guy:
Actually, I think that interview might be phony. There are some strange inconsistencies in it. I think it was actually made up as a "what if" interview by the author.
Quote from Wittgenstein:
Any details?
I was surprised he said in the interview that he read Barron's every dag. It is a weekly. And Darvas knew that...
Quote from just21:
From the et book reviews posted by kohlhofers April 13, 2006 4:34 AM
Relevant
Original Content
Insightful
Clearly Written
Worth the Money
Back in the 1960s an American nightclub dancer called Nicholas Darvas wrote a book called How I Made Two Million Dollars in the Stock Market. The book told of how the dancer - while pirouetting on the dance floors of the world's most fashionable nightspots - amassed a fortune between engagements by using a simple system. He described it as the `box system'. Copies of frantic cables between Darvas and his stockbrokers were reproduced, showing the companies he was dealing in, the price paid for the shares and the price at which they were sold. There were also heated conversations between Darvas and various film stars of his acquaintance, wanting to know more about his great gift as a stock market speculator. The book combined the razzamatazz of showbiz, the glamour of Hollywood, the nightlife of the international jet set and a formula for quick, easy riches. Woweeee! What a formula for a best-seller! Indeed it was a best-seller, appearing week after week and month after month at number one in the book charts. Millions of copies were sold all over the world to the financially washed, the financially unwashed and the financially unwashable. The book fired the hopes and imagination of millions of people in the United States and elsewhere. In their eyes, with a judgment totally undeflected by thought and reason, Nicholas Darvas was the new Messiah of the financial world, willing to spread the commandments which would bring great riches to all who followed. Darvas had found the touchstone - the Midas touch - which was within reach of anyone able to count and perform feats of simple arithmetic. The subliminal promise of the book was that anybody could make a fortune in the stock market. After all, if a nightclub dancer could do it by spending a few minutes a day on the telephone between jaunts of terpsichore, even a migratory fruit-picker should be able to do it by sending hand signals from a tree. So, in the 1960s, yet another myth was added to help fertilize the seeds of mania that were already sown. Of course, there were a few who could still remember the Crash of '29. But they were mere grains of sand on a beach of billions, ready and willing to be mesmerized by the allure of easy riches, as their ancestors had been so many times before. Not too long after Darvas's book was published, a public inquiry was instigated by Louis Lefkowitz, then US Attorney General. The purpose of the inquiry was to ascertain the validity of the claims made by Darvas, given the influence the book was exerting over what could be a dangerously gullible public. The investigation strongly indicated that the overall claim of the book could be totally fictitious. There seemed to be considerable falsification by omission. While Darvas proudly wrote of the profitable trades he had made, the investigation revealed a number of loss-making trades made by Darvas which never appeared in the book. If the loss-making trades made by Darvas - which never appeared in the book - were deducted from the profit-making trades - which did appear in the book - it was difficult to see how Darvas had made 2 million dollars in the stock market ... if he had made anything at all! Furthermore, the 'box system' which he claimed to have discovered bore a strong resemblance to a system advocated by the king of all speculators, Jesse Livermore, in his one and only book, The Livermore Key. One of the reasons that Livermore took his own life was the fact that the methods outlined in his book were no longer feasible in the United States following the introduction of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the imposition of various restrictions on share dealings. By the time How I Made Two Million Dollars in the Stock Market was published, people had forgotten all about Jesse Livermore. Livermore had become the anti-hero of a bygone era along with the Crash of '29. After studying the findings of the Darvas investigation the Attorney General launched a criminal action against him, alleging that certain statements he had made were fraudulent. Darvas's legal advisers countered with an action against the Attorney General and the United States for defamation of character. Lefkowitz decided the public interest would not he served by embarking on a long, tedious and complicated trial that was likely to give Darvas even more attention than he had already received. He therefore decided to drop the criminal action on condition that Darvas withdrew his action, giving an undertaking never to transact any type of securities dealings in the United States, or to become in any way involved in the US securities industry. Darvas agreed. He then left the United States to become an exile in Europe. Whether or not Darvas actually made 2 million dollars in the stock market has yet to he proved. It is a matter of public record, however, that he made several million dollars from the sale of his book. But by the time I met him in 1976 in the Dorchester Hotel in London, there was every indication that most of the royalties had been whittled away. There had certainly been no profitable share dealing using the `box system'. At the time, Darvas had very little to say about the stock market. By this time he was trying to make a personal comeback with a new book he was writing. It was called How to Be Your Own Doctor. We met on several occasions after that. The man fascinated me. l really wanted to know what made him tick! I've known several successful stock market operators over the years, all of whom shared certain characteristics. Darvas was a showman and a promoter of the highest order. But the qualities which comprise the successful stock market operator were nowhere to he found in my assessment of his character. A few months after our initial meeting Nicholas Darvas checked out of the Dorchester Hotel without leaving a forwarding address. It was to he several years before I heard the name again. The last occasion his name came up was the result of a telephone call 1 had from a firm of lawyers. It seems I have acquired a reputation as a central information bureau for every stock market operator coming in and out of London. The lawyers wanted to know if I could held them find Darvas. They had a bankruptcy petition against him. It was long overdue for service!
Robert Beckman â Crashes, Why do they happen â What to do
Quote from Wittgenstein:
Thank you, just21. But Darvas must still have been a rich man in 1976 since he could stay at Dorchester Hotel, one of the most expensive hotels in London.
We need a good writer who could research the life of Nicolas Darvas and write a book about him.
Re: Robert Beckman â Crashes, Why do they happen â What to doQuote from Darvas Guy:
I'm actually fairly involved in chronicling the life and strategies of Nicolas Darvas. In particular, I recently made contact with one of his personal acquaintances who is still alive and well.
He therefore decided to drop the criminal action on condition that Darvas withdrew his action, giving an undertaking never to transact any type of securities dealings in the United States, or to become in any way involved in the US securities industry.
Quote from deaddog:
Amazon.com has it for sale. Not sure if it's the same interview.