Has anyone read this from traders-talk.com
http://www.traders-talk.com/mb2/index.php?showtopic=12007&hl=larry+williams
If that's true, i also do not think that larry williams words should be taken very very critically..
I lost respect for Larry Williams,because he has some problems with citations..He likes presenting people that are alive as dead, and people that are dead, as alive..
The first person that he presented as a person that "comitted suicide in 1983" was Frankie Joe..He says that on page 98 of his book " DayTrade Futures Online". Anyone with account at amazon, can check this page online..
However, one can check Marty Schwartz book "Pitbull", where he descibes that he won a trading contest over Frankie Joe. And it is not just Schwartz words - i found two articles in WSJ about Frankie Joe..
The Outlook: Is Inflation Dead? Don't Bet the Ranch
By Alfred L. Malabre Jr.. Wall Street Journal (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Jan 21, 1985. p. 1
Eleventh-Hour Killing Is Margin Of Victory in Commodities Match
By Allanna Sullivan. Wall Street Journal (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Jun 7, 1984. p. 1
In the first one, Mr Joe is asked about his views on inflation, "The economy's going through a transition period from accelerating inflation . . . to disinflation and eventually deflation," says Frankie Joe, a private money manager who participated in Barron's recent panel on the 1985 outlook."
The second one is about Schwartz winning over Frankie Joe, who had insights of a 86 year old.
Well, there is a slight probability that Larry Williams and WSJ are reffering to different Frankie Joes..
Ok, here comes another citation problem with his book "daytrade futures online" on page 99.
He talks about "old man E.H. Harriman" who made a lotta money by analysing his clients trading accounts according to Williams. And,according to an interview with mr Harriman in 1912 he said that his secret to making money on the stock market is that he never let a stock run more than 3/4 of a point against him.
So far so good.. I was inspired to learn more about mr Harriman, because i made some historical comparisons with the railroad boom of late 1890's and early 1900's wih the Internet Boom of 1990's and early 2000's .. So i went on amazon.com to look for books about mr Harriman.. And it was funny, when i saw on the cover of ne of his autobiographical books, that he lived from 1847 to 1909. And this was according to several books, that were printed well before Larry's latest book "daytrading futures online".
Now , i simply do not believe him at all.. In my opinion ,even his tests or computer simulations of his strategies should be doubted .. Of course, his books hav nice little gems, so they should not be discarded at all.. But if one reads his works. Read Critically..
Have a nice weekend!
E.H. Harriman
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/s...harriman&store-name=books/103-3909284-2706220
http://www.traders-talk.com/mb2/index.php?showtopic=12007&hl=larry+williams
If that's true, i also do not think that larry williams words should be taken very very critically..
I lost respect for Larry Williams,because he has some problems with citations..He likes presenting people that are alive as dead, and people that are dead, as alive..
The first person that he presented as a person that "comitted suicide in 1983" was Frankie Joe..He says that on page 98 of his book " DayTrade Futures Online". Anyone with account at amazon, can check this page online..
However, one can check Marty Schwartz book "Pitbull", where he descibes that he won a trading contest over Frankie Joe. And it is not just Schwartz words - i found two articles in WSJ about Frankie Joe..
The Outlook: Is Inflation Dead? Don't Bet the Ranch
By Alfred L. Malabre Jr.. Wall Street Journal (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Jan 21, 1985. p. 1
Eleventh-Hour Killing Is Margin Of Victory in Commodities Match
By Allanna Sullivan. Wall Street Journal (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Jun 7, 1984. p. 1
In the first one, Mr Joe is asked about his views on inflation, "The economy's going through a transition period from accelerating inflation . . . to disinflation and eventually deflation," says Frankie Joe, a private money manager who participated in Barron's recent panel on the 1985 outlook."
The second one is about Schwartz winning over Frankie Joe, who had insights of a 86 year old.
Well, there is a slight probability that Larry Williams and WSJ are reffering to different Frankie Joes..
Ok, here comes another citation problem with his book "daytrade futures online" on page 99.
He talks about "old man E.H. Harriman" who made a lotta money by analysing his clients trading accounts according to Williams. And,according to an interview with mr Harriman in 1912 he said that his secret to making money on the stock market is that he never let a stock run more than 3/4 of a point against him.
So far so good.. I was inspired to learn more about mr Harriman, because i made some historical comparisons with the railroad boom of late 1890's and early 1900's wih the Internet Boom of 1990's and early 2000's .. So i went on amazon.com to look for books about mr Harriman.. And it was funny, when i saw on the cover of ne of his autobiographical books, that he lived from 1847 to 1909. And this was according to several books, that were printed well before Larry's latest book "daytrading futures online".
Now , i simply do not believe him at all.. In my opinion ,even his tests or computer simulations of his strategies should be doubted .. Of course, his books hav nice little gems, so they should not be discarded at all.. But if one reads his works. Read Critically..
Have a nice weekend!
E.H. Harriman
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/s...harriman&store-name=books/103-3909284-2706220
