Jim Rogers was in the original Market Wizards book and he's done incredibly well over the last few years. He made a brilliant macro call on commodities (starting a commodity fund in 1998!). He also bought Chinese B shares when they were in the toilet, he called the bond market bottom last summer.
The main fallacy in trading is that everyone thinks its a level playing field. If you took 100 people at random off the street, the vast majority would not have the personalities to trade successfully. I think successful trading takes more discipline than losing weight for example. Everyone knows how to lose weight (diet and exercise) but no one does it. In the EMT and academia world, everyone would be thin and vibrant. Even a great mind like Soros caved in and bought tech in 1999. It took absolute raw and unrelenting discipline to pass up tech completely (i.e. Buffett).
Guys like PTJ, Neiderhoffer, Buffet, Soros, Rogers, they all have a similar personality. Staunchly independent thinkers, loners, mavericks. That's their main competitive advantage.
The main fallacy in trading is that everyone thinks its a level playing field. If you took 100 people at random off the street, the vast majority would not have the personalities to trade successfully. I think successful trading takes more discipline than losing weight for example. Everyone knows how to lose weight (diet and exercise) but no one does it. In the EMT and academia world, everyone would be thin and vibrant. Even a great mind like Soros caved in and bought tech in 1999. It took absolute raw and unrelenting discipline to pass up tech completely (i.e. Buffett).
Guys like PTJ, Neiderhoffer, Buffet, Soros, Rogers, they all have a similar personality. Staunchly independent thinkers, loners, mavericks. That's their main competitive advantage.