I hope everyone goes bankrupt.
Quote from Port1385:
I dont understand why he just doesnt come out to explain what is going on. He posted here quite frequently and I enjoyed his posts. However, he simply vanished like a prop trader that just blew his deposit.
It looks like his fund is taking it on the chin again. Last time, he lost 80% on the old fund. The new fund is now underwater over 27%. How are his investors taking these losses and why isnt he on here attempting to explain what in the hell is going on?
http://www.schindlertrading.com/index.php?page=performance
Aaron, dude, its game over bro. Time to move on to a new line of work.
Quote from Pekelo:
Is it really that hard to run a small fund??? Down 30%? I could understand maybe 10%, but 30???
Quote from jsmith:
I also enjoyed Aaron's posts when he use to be here on ET. He was very intelligent and gave us ideas on how he backtested his strategies.
Unfortunately, the market went out of norms and had numbers that his mean reversion systems couldn't handle. After the Schindler Fund experienced a -52% January, he closed the fund to new investors and opened his new IEP fund.
The IEP is current down around 40% as of today.
"return since inception (3/1/08) -39.8%"
It really suprises me if someone with his intelligence and experience has trouble outperforming the market, what chance do us investors/traders have.
Quote from Capablanca:
If one is only going long and is fully invested, his performance is not surprising.
If you read the description of the EIP fund then you would know its objectives.Quote from Pekelo:
I was not aware that he HAD TO BE in the market all the time fully invested. Also, wasn't he into natural gas or oil earlier? I thought he would catch the big run up in oil.
I don't see why investors would DEMAND that a fund (specially a small fund) needs to be in a market all the time, when clearly this year shows that cash can be king in hard times.