Quote from Ivanovich:
You think I'm crazy because I allude to a link between Goldman Sachs and the Federal Reserve?

Quote from Kassz007:
Insane statistic. GS is clearly unstoppable at this point.
Out of curiosity, does anyone know how this statistic compares with other IB's?
Quote from krazykarl:
No, all the major banks are linked to the Fed if not directly then by proxy via one of the member banks.
I think you're nuts alluding to an Elvis-is-still-alive/Alien conspiracy.![]()
Quote from Ivanovich:
If you're not going to be specific with your defamatory remarks, just don't make them, ne?
Quote from Ivanovich:
ZeroHedge followup analysis on the original article:
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/an...ng-perfection-and-statistical-improbabilities
When a firm's trading performance challenges not only all preconceptions of realistic trading, but also of statistical distributions, one can merely stand back and watch in awe. Attached is a graphic of what a rigged, backstopped and manipulated market is all about. The chart demonstrates Goldman's YTD trading track record: out of 194 trading days in 2009, the firm has made over $100 million on 116 occasions! This alone accounts for $11.6 billion in revenue (and is likely much more as Goldman could have easily had a $1 billion trading day in the rightmost bracket as it is open ended). Assuming midline averages for any given bucket and multiplying by the amount of days that the firm traded within these, Goldman Sachs has made $15 billion courtesy of the skewed and very highly improbable (but not impossible, thank you taxpayers and Ben Bernanke) chart.
(charts on site)
Quote from krazykarl:
A better question is how does it compare with Goldman's historical performance? Answer: not much different from 3 decades ago. When you hire the top 1% of the top 1% of schools' graduating classes you tend to do better than most.
Quote from 5yrtrader:
As if Havard and MIT teach their MBAs some secret to making money at trading, which can only be done at Goldman.
Also, historically, it hasn't been the best and the brightest went to wall street, they were rocket scientists, entrepreneurs and other worth while occupations.
5yr
Quote from krazykarl:
They have almost 1 trillion dollars under management and have hired the top graduates from the top schools over the past 50 years. Why should they not be making returns trading like that??? Why would the supposed best firm not act as such? You guys are making this way too complicated. The Yankees have a ton of championships for the same reason: they stack their roster with the best players, paid for with proceeds from previous wins.
If a monkey had almost a trillion to trade with I would expect the monkey to make at least a few mil, law of averages. Use people slightly better than monkeys and I expect better performance.