Quote from Agassi:
Both Lescor and Michael Burry (or should i say Dr. Michael Burry) are all self taught.
Quote from ~~~:
many highly successful people don't have a college or university degree.. they attended the "university of life" and graduated with great honors and lescor is one of them![]()
when i was a trainee..so many traders with good degrees got kicked out because they can't trade-well and i told my-self I don't wanna get axed...
i must trade-well because in the trading world, the most important is "the real good-result not the paper-qualification.
lescor is truly inspiring ....![]()
Quote from lescor:
Really dull week, pretty dead after the open every day. I was out of the office after the first 60 to 90 minutes each day, just popping in now and then to see if anything was going on.
+10,400 on 356,000 shrs. Daily pl was +5, +4, +3, -2, +1. Two errors this week for $2,000 each time. Accidentally held some positions over the weekend, thought I had sent closing orders and I hadn't. I had longs and shorts and every one of them was closed out as a loser Monday morning. Then Thursday I went to penny an offer pre-market and accidentally hit the bid, shorting the stock $2 below where it was going to open. I haven't had to call to request a trade bust in so long I even forgot to do it until it was too late- by three minutes! At least the other side agreed to a price adjustment or it would have been twice as bad. Otherwise very uneventful trading, nothing really stands out.
Quote from Bootsie:
Can't recall if you've mentioned this or not... but, how do you determine the size you'll take in a position? I know you piece in and out but I imagine there's a limit to size at some point. What determines that limit?
Also, what "things" were you doing to help increase that size? ie what situations allowed that process to improve and grow.
Thx
B
Quote from Trexticle:
So lescor, how is the house building going. I am in the business, so I know how time consuming and how much stress it can cause. I see people all the time that are trying to pick out selections for their new house and by the time they get half done they need a vacation, and most of them take one. I assume it is pulling a lot of your time away from this journal. Is the low volatility killing you or just giving you less profits?
Quote from lescor:
Actually it's been going amazingly smooth to this point. We have 10 acres on the edge of the city. We're living in the original house and building the new one 50' away, so we're on top of things right away and always know what's going on. We have the best custom builder in the city and they're very well organized.
My wife is stressed over colors, floor samples, etc, but I am only in charge of the man garage, the workout room and the office, so no worries for me! They're putting on the roof right now and we'll have it closed up with windows and doors in about three weeks. Move in still towards the end of the year though.
Here's what it should look like when done. It's a douglas fir timber frame.
Quote from saxon22:
Am I seeing double or there is going to be 4 car garages? I guess that R8 is still totally not out of the picture.
Since I have already started writing, let me ask a quick question:
You have mentioned that often the extra $$$$ you generate stays in the broker's account. Do you think you do that intentionally (perhaps subconsciously) to have that extra buffer zone before you get into semi panic territory?
Do you find trading with that extra $$$ parked in the same account calming?
The reason I am asking is that when I first broke on the "trading stage" like many had the symbolic amount of 5K and that minuscule amount made me do tings I would not have done had the account been fatter. Basically, it seems that the more one has in the account, the calmer one trades and therefore the propensity to commit errors is not as pronounced. Wouldn't you agree?