Quote from easyguru:
Jesse Livermore came to conclude from tape reading that day trading or short term trading is not the way to finance riches and went on to become a trend follower.

Quote from listedguru:
Anyone left out there who tapereads nyse stocks and makes a living at it? It seems I'm hearing more and more each day about people and their fancy blackboxes. Starting to think that most of the trading is just between computers these days?
-Guru
Quote from roberk:
So true.
Quote from easyguru:
Jesse Livermore came to conclude from tape reading that day trading or short term trading is not the way to finance riches and went on to become a trend follower.
Quote from listedguru:
Anyone left out there who tapereads nyse stocks and makes a living at it? It seems I'm hearing more and more each day about people and their fancy blackboxes. Starting to think that most of the trading is just between computers these days?
-Guru
Quote from CalTrader:
It still works. You dont need a blackbox to trade: I know quite a few people that simply watch the market and their current issues of interest and refer to a chart. They do very well. I also know others that use huge amounts of computing power and surround themselves with monitors and TV's: Funny thing is, they both make money and the experienced person with a simple chart and quote feed often makes more than the people that invested tens or hundreds of thousands on "smart" systems and overcapacity hardware.
Experience still counts in this business and cant be completely replaced by programming: just keep that in mind .....
Quote from Thunderdog:
Yes, I vaguely recall that general reference in the "Reminiscences" book, and I also think there is something to igOr's reply to your post. However, it is interesting to note that Mr. Livermore was more consistently profitable before he apparently went for the big moves. If memory serves (I last read the book a few years ago) he may have made more money later on when he apparently adopted a longer term view. However, that is also the time he ran into greater financial difficulty from which he eventually was not able to extricate himself. Perhaps there is no causal relationship between the two, but at the very least it is an interesting coincidence. I wonder if subscribing to a longer term view may potentially have a blinding effect resulting from a bias. Who knows. It seems that, at times, some people make money and others don't. Each then justifies the outcome as he or she sees fit. And so it goes.