Remember DLJ market strategist Tom Galvin?
He was a God until the end of the Big Bull Market in 2000 when the MEDIA "killed" him.
http://www.thestreet.com/markets/aarontaskfree/932780.html
"Galvin is the new star on Wall Street," the source said. "Plus, the press has already destroyed just about everyone else."
Indeed. Remember when Ralph Acampora could move markets with a mere twitch? Or -- for those who've been around the game a little longer -- Joe Granville? Or Michael Metz, etc., etc.
To his credit, Galvin eschewed the guru-king title.
"This market is way too big for any one person," he said Wednesday afternoon. "I would never want to be a daytrading strategist. I'm not there to say what will happen tomorrow. Hopefully, I can tell people where they should or should not be looking over the next three to six months."
That sounds pretty much like what a Wall Street strategist traditionally has done. The problem, it seems, is that there's such a focus on the here and now these days, that there's a ceaseless demand for instant analysis, if not a savior. Goldman Sachs' Abby Joseph Cohen has reigned so long on Wall Street because she almost never comments on short-term fluctuations.
Galvin would do well to follow her lead, or risk being sent to the media equivalent of the gallows, should he dare commit the cardinal sin of being wrong.
To err is human. To forgive, unlikely."
He was a God until the end of the Big Bull Market in 2000 when the MEDIA "killed" him.
http://www.thestreet.com/markets/aarontaskfree/932780.html
"Galvin is the new star on Wall Street," the source said. "Plus, the press has already destroyed just about everyone else."
Indeed. Remember when Ralph Acampora could move markets with a mere twitch? Or -- for those who've been around the game a little longer -- Joe Granville? Or Michael Metz, etc., etc.
To his credit, Galvin eschewed the guru-king title.
"This market is way too big for any one person," he said Wednesday afternoon. "I would never want to be a daytrading strategist. I'm not there to say what will happen tomorrow. Hopefully, I can tell people where they should or should not be looking over the next three to six months."
That sounds pretty much like what a Wall Street strategist traditionally has done. The problem, it seems, is that there's such a focus on the here and now these days, that there's a ceaseless demand for instant analysis, if not a savior. Goldman Sachs' Abby Joseph Cohen has reigned so long on Wall Street because she almost never comments on short-term fluctuations.
Galvin would do well to follow her lead, or risk being sent to the media equivalent of the gallows, should he dare commit the cardinal sin of being wrong.
To err is human. To forgive, unlikely."

