Quote from Pabst:
I agree wholeheartedly with your first point. However to self righteously shit on people who were caught in the 1/2001 rate cut as "lazy" is ridiculous. If Greenspan dies to-morrow at noon and bonds break 4 handles before the news is even on the tape would I criticize someone for lacking the foresight to trade small knowing there's an aged Fed Chairman in office. Or how about bond locals who in one case lost 4 million on the Treasury's announcement to eliminate 30 year issuance? Yes trading one contract per 5-10k would eliminate the blow out potential. But don't misconstrue additional risk thresholds as systematic of being lazy or historically ignorant. The trader on this thread who lost seven figures on the 2001 rate cut is possibly the wealthiest guy here. Even though that was a big drawdown for him he's no idiot. I agree that index/fixed income traders should either UNDERTRADE or have stops IMMEDIATELY above/below there positions. A far away "safety" stop is useless in the type of cascading stop avalanche that an assassination or something of the like can bring.
Quote from Steelhead:
anyone thats been through it and survived is a better man for it
Quote from Rearden Metal:
January 3rd, 2001.
A day that will live in infamy.
Market was acting weak, and I was short heavily in all my accounts. Suddenly the fed cuts interest rates by half a point. WHAT THE FUCK? I let out a loud blood curdling shriek. There wasn't even a fed meeting that day, and this was the first rate cut of the cycle. Spooz instantly pop 50 handles. Instantly I find myself down 2 1/2 mil. Yes, $2,500,000.
I instinctively cover & reverse, ending the day down 'only' 1 1/2 mil.
Of course you don't believe me. I wouldn't believe me either, but it happened.
Quote from areyoukidding?:
$250 and 2.5 million and you think you shared his pain. YOu must be joking. I hope you are. I really do.
I made 150K that day.
Quote from ArbProfit:
You edited your previous post and added in 1/10,000ths, then rag on another poster for missing it, come on.