paul tudor jones interview continued...
Q: What are some perceptions and priorities of yours that have changed over the years?
A: I think thereâs a natural progression that everyone goes through. The older you get, the more youâll realize that a quality life is one that has an extraordinary balance in it. The guy thatâs working at 75 years of age and still running a company, that doesnât have any appeal to me because I think his life is out of balance. If the only thing that he can find thatâs that satisfying to him is being involved in a profession with something, I think youâve got to have more balance. In my 20âs all I cared about was being financially successful and today I look to strive for a more balanced life. In that context though, when I come to work Iâm as competitive as anybody youâll meet and I clearly look forward to the day when I have the best performance of my peers, the macro hedge funds, for the year, which hopefully will be this year.
Q: What was the best and worst year you ever had?
A: The worst year was probably 1993. I only returned 1.6%. Never had a down year. And my best years, well I fortunately cut my teeth in two great bear markets, the â87 bear market and the 1990 Japan bear market and thereâs no question that thatâs biased me a bit. I returned about 200% in 1987 and 80% or 90% in 1990. I worked 80 hours a week and clearly Iâm not doing that without trying to be number one. All my friends are in the business, and I wish them all well, but everybodyâs got a competitive spirit.
Q: Are you more naturally bearish or bullish?
A: Bearish, I think. I would have difficulty asking anyone to pay 10 or 20 times earnings for my earnings capability for the rest of my life. I would think youâre crazy to do that even though it might be a great deal, so the concept of paying one-hundred-and-something times earnings for any company for me is just anathema. Having said that, at the end of the day, your job is to buy what goes up and to sell what goes down so really who gives a damn about PEâs? If itâs going up youâre supposed to be long it. But thereâs no question that itâs just easier for me to leverage with some degree of conviction the short side of some markets.
Q: When are you going to retire?
A: I have a son that just turned three and I would unequivocally continue to trade until he went to college. At that point I think Iâd probably be airborne hunting and fishing all over the globe every day in my life. I donât even necessarily need to be hunting and fishing, I just love to be out doors.
Q: What do you think is going to happen to your company when you do retire?
A: I could get run over by a truck tomorrow morning and the company would go on and wouldnât miss a beat. Weâve got the best business model there is on the street for doing this.
Q: Who are you going to vote for in the presidential election?
A: I think the biggest issue facing America, unequivocally, is campaign finance reform. When you sit down and talk about gun control or charter schools or whatever, all those issues, itâs impossible to have politicians actually vote their conscience when theyâre all unequivocally conflicted because of the fund raising necessities they have and the amount of money they take. Until you have campaign finance reform and term limits, weâre dealing with a whole group of elected officials who are incapable of making any independent and honest decisions. So McCain, Bradley, Iâll vote for either one of them. Iâll vote for any politician thatâs going to sign the dotted line to get the money lenders out of the temple. I think that if you look at the 13,000 registered lobbyists in Washington, what chance do you or I have of having a voice in government unless youâre willing to write a big check? Because thatâs what all those guys are doing. Iâll tell you from my conservation battles down in Florida. The entire sugar industry in Florida, which is destroying the Everglades, they have one business. Their business is not growing sugar. Their business is paying off every politician that they can see simply so that they can continue with a subsidy that does nothing but take money out of every Americans pocket and put it in theirs.
Q: You were close to getting that legislation to go your way, werenât you?
A: Right. And they spent forty some-odd-million dollars to fight us. Forty million dollars that they probably got through some extraordinarily inequitable and unfair and offensive subsidy that they have done an excellent job of paying off every politician in Congress for. Campaign finance for me is the key issue. Itâs funny, McCain is a great example. Heâs probably way too conservative for me, but Iâd vote for the guy in a heart beat because thereâs no doubt in my mind that he more so than anyone would probably go in and attack the vested interests there in Washington that completely distort and destroy our political process.