Jesse Livermore: World's Greatest Stock TraderJohn Wiley & Sons, 2002年7月15日 - 336页 In dem Bestseller "Reminiscences of a Stock Operator" (bei Wiley 0471 05970 6) wurde er bereits porträtiert. Aber dieses Buch ist die erste umfassende Biographie der Börsenlegende Jesse Livermore. Obwohl Livermore vor über 50 Jahren starb, gilt er bei Spitzenhändlern noch heute als der größte Aktienhändler aller Zeiten. Livermore war ein rätselhafter Einzelgänger, ein Menschenfeind und ein notorischer Geizhals, doch er revolutionierte den Aktienhandel durch innovative Timing-Verfahren, durch Strategien zum Geldmanagement und durch seine Methode des Handelns in aufsteigenden Märkten, d.h. durch Kauf von Werten mit starkem Momentum. Autor Richard Smitten zeichnet hier ein lebendiges Bild von Livermore und der Ära, in der er lebte und arbeitete. Geschickt verbindet er Augenzeugenberichte jener, die ihn kannten, mit faszinierenden Geschichten über sensationelle Liebesabenteuer, Schießereien und Selbstmorde sowie mit einer ausführlichen Darstellung jener Handelsstrategien, die Livermore reich, berühmt und zum größten Aktienhändler gemacht haben, den die Welt je gesehen hat. Eine ebenso interessante wie amüsante Lektüre. |
目录
1 | |
19 | |
chapter three The San Francisco Earthquake Rumbles in New York | 39 |
chapter four The Crash of 1907 | 63 |
chapter five The Cotton King | 85 |
chapter six Back on His Game | 107 |
chapter seven Perfecting His Market Theory | 127 |
chapter eight Stock Pools and Scandals | 151 |
chapter eleven When to Hold and When to Fold | 205 |
chapter twelve Livermores MoneyManagement Rules | 223 |
chapter thirteen Livermores Luck Sours | 245 |
chapter fourteen The Shooting of Jesse Livermore Jr | 265 |
chapter fifteen Facing the Grim Reaper | 277 |
appendix Livermores Laws and Trading Secrets Revealed | 301 |
Sources | 315 |
Bibliography | 317 |
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常见术语和短语
asked Barry basic believed Blue Larkspur Boston Billy bought Boy Plunger Bradley Bradley’s broke bucket shops bull market called cash chalkboard Chrysler Cotton King crash Cutten dollars door Dorothy Dorothy’s emotions ermore father finally gambler hand Harriet Hutton J. P. Morgan Jesse Livermore Jesse’s July 15 later least resistance line of least Liver Livermore knew Livermore’s looked loved million Monaghan mother Mousie move Nassau County never Palm Beach Patricia Paul percent person pivotal point players police pool profit reversal pivotal rules rumors sell short shares shooting short positions short selling shot smiled sold speculator stock market strategy tape tell thing ticker tions tips told took trading trend U.S. Steel waiting walked Wall Street Walter Chrysler wanted watched What’s yacht York York Stock Exchange
热门引用章节
第264页 - Julian and his romantic awe of them and how he had started a story once that began, 'The very rich are different from you and me.
第41页 - The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, Moves on; nor all your Piety nor Wit Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line, Nor all your Tears wash out a Word of it.
第306页 - Confine your studies of movements to the prominent stocks of the day. If you cannot make money out of the leading active Issues, you are not going to make money out of the stock market as a whole.
第233页 - I believe that having the discipline to follow your rules is essential. Without specific, clear, and tested rules speculators do not have any real chance of success. Why, because speculators without a plan are like a general without a strategy, and therefore...
第38页 - To be able to do this successfully—and it is an ability of priceless value in all human affairs, including the making of peace and war— three things are necessary: First, one must get the facts of a situation or problem. Second, one must form a judgment as to what those facts portend. Third, one must act in time— before it is too late.
第150页 - The principles of successful stock speculation are based on the supposition that people will continue in the future to make the mistakes that they have made in the past.
第304页 - Study the stocks like you would study people, after a while their reactions to certain circumstances become predictable, and useful, in timing the stock's movement. * Stocks are never too high to begin buying or too low to begin selling short. *Failure to take the opportunity to get out of large illiquid positions when the opportunity presents itself can cost. *Failure to take advantage of a serendipitous act of good luck in the stock market is often a mistake. *In a market moving sideways in a narrow...
第11页 - What little business I do in the stock market has only been as an individual and will continue to be done on such a basis. "It is very foolish to think that any individual or combination of individuals could artificially bring about a decline in the stock market in a country so large and so prosperous as the United States.