http://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanv...-john-paulsons-comeback-crashes-in-september/
Here is what happens when you try to pick the winners.
Here is what happens when you try to pick the winners.
I just wrote:if I predict that I will be profitable this year it is a prediction too, and I am sure I will be profitable this year. So I can predict, within certain limits. But limits that make me money.No, you DON'T know that for sure. That is hindsight bias. I also know who won last year's Super Bowl. I have no idea who will win next year's. James Simon had a commodity fund that blew out before he launched Renaissance. Which actually made it difficult for him early to get investors into Renaissance. Years after Renaissance became successful he launched a managed futures product and an equity fund. Both were failures! You cannot predict the future. Do you want to tell me which hedge fund will have the best performance for July? Come on Mr. Oracle. If it's so easy, tell me who the big winner will be BEFORE the results. I can't wait. You are on the clock.
No. Ackman was getting killed for a while. Some of his shorts almost bankrupted his fund. Had you tried to cherry pick some of his trades, there is some probability you would have been short one of his stocks that doubled in his face. It was only because he had a few big winners that allowed him to hold those shorts that went against him for months. Cherry picking is NOT the answer. And again, that comes back to trading. Do you think you have the "ability" to "predict" which of his ideas are golden? Well.....that is trading! It doesn't how matter where you are getting the info from, you still have to take a risk. You still have an uncertain future outcome. You still have to manage the position size, know when to get out. Know when you are wrong...etc. There is NO way around this.
There is no magic pill, formula, or secret. Most successful traders are successful because they are good at measuring risk, managing it, pricing it and optimizing it. And that requires a lot of hard work, a lot of skill and a lot of experience. You cannot simply "copy" it. There are no such unicorns.
For every example you find I can find one proving the opposite. Proof should be in numbers that are statistically representative and valid.http://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanv...-john-paulsons-comeback-crashes-in-september/
Here is what happens when you try to pick the winners.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/nathanv...-john-paulsons-comeback-crashes-in-september/
Here is what happens when you try to pick the winners.
These guys have beat the market for years using controversial methods. I can't imagine that having access to their personal portfolio moves won't give me an edge. If I were an employee at Ameritrade, I'd probably be looking for penny pumpers and insiders. If I've identified an account as belonging to a notorious penny pumper and identified when they're accumulating shares prior to the pump, I would certainly go along for the ride. Anyway, I'm not arguing that a trading edge means 100% certainty.
Ackman has a hard time entering/exiting a $1 billion positions, but he had a huge impact on HLF before Icahn, Loeb, and others came to the rescue.
Notice I said personal portfolio, not necessarily the fund they manage. And I'd certainly lean towards activist investors. At a retail brokerage I'd probably focus on successful penny pumpers, insiders.. well basically I'd look at the trading pattern in the top .01% percentage return accounts for the past 5 years. I think I can identify when someone was getting lucky vs. when they are consistently trading with obvious insider knowledge or consistently accumulating shares before newsletter pumps, etc.
For every example you find I can find one proving the opposite. Proof should be in numbers that are statistically representative and valid.
That's what you would call hindsight. At least if somebody else would post it. Next 5 years can be totally different. So totally irrelevant as proof of anything.In fact, Jack Schwager in his brilliant book showed empirical evidence that the optimal strategy was betting on the losers!!!! And he has the data to back it up. He said buying the losers among CTA's with a minimum track record, say 5 years, was the best performing strategy. Read his book. I highly recommend it.
That's what you would call hindsight. At least if somebody else would post it. Next 5 years can be totally different. So totally irrelevant as proof of anything.