Quote from sle:
So far I have seen exactly the opposite - it is the technical traders that advertise their prowess. Have you ever seen a book "Make easy money with quant finance"? Or "quantitative trading techniques for dummies"?As for loosing money - what happend to all the great equity trend followers that made millions during the 90's?
Sle,
at least, there's one point we agree on. I think the press likes to focus on quant HFs that blow like LTCM,etc. It makes for good stories for people to hear.
But I would BET $ that NON-QUANTS as a WHOLE have lost many multiples of quants, just because there are more of them. Just look at your typical mutual fund managers. The Janus and tech fund of the 90s have lost 50-70% of their asset. They have lost in the TRILLIONS! Yes, TRILLIONS. But no one said anything, because the public has been tricked into thinking "oh, it's my long term investment. it will come back." It might or might not come back. But unrealized loss is the same thing as realized loss for a real trader.
How come no one is saying anything about those equity fund managers huh? I read in a recent Money, Bloomberg or one of those popular finance magazines about a Lincoln Asset Management(a money manager). They had $20B in 2000 peak. And now they have $1B. That means they lost 95%!!! 95% FREAKIN' percent of their asset! That made the LTCM's loss of a few billions look like nothing.
How come the public is not enraged by that? And we are not even talking about the untold billions and billions lost by traditional funds either. The public is fooled as always.
Hey, my point is that having a good strategy, good risk mgmt, good money mgmt, etc. are all necessary. REGARDLESS of methods used. I'm not championing QA, TA, FA,etc. I used a combo of all three with more emphasis on TA and QA.
But before people start bashing on quants as gamblers you gotta know that traditional long term investors are the biggest gamblers of them all! They just sit in the position into the bitter end or bail out at the bottom or just hope in 20yrs things will come back.
As Jesse Livermore said,"The biggest gamblers in the markets are investors. IF they are wrong, then they lose it all"
As for loosing money - what happend to all the great equity trend followers that made millions during the 90's? 