Mike,
1. It’s my money.
2. Why not just trade bigger amounts?
Clearly, I don’t have all the skills as you do, as I’m somewhat of a “one trick pony,” as I only trade UPRO, a 3X leveraged S&P ETF, and I essentially “buy the dips,” as defined by price channels, slow stochastics and MACD. My holding period is weeks/months, more swing trading. I’m really looking for fear and greed. Debt ceiling debate was a lay up. A little manufactured fear, with a leveraged ETF worked wonders.
Here are some books that I’ve read: Alexander Elder’s three books, Trading for a Living, Come Into My Trading Room, and The New Sell and Sell Short; Jesse Livermore’s Reminiscences of a Stock Operatator and How to Trade in Stocks; and Trend Following by Michael Covell.
I’ve also read a few trading psychology books, and I bought the one you recommended by Steen. I’m also buying Kiev. If this guy counsels SAC Capital, there’s certainly something I can learn. I’ve also read various books on fundamentals, including: Security Analysis, Intelligent Investor, and the Buffettology series. For daily reading, that would include The Wall Street Journal, IBD, and I’m somewhat addicted to CNBC. As for blogs, I don’t follow any—but I will now follow yours.
@mikebellafiore
When I first went to Steve to ask him about starting a prop desk this slide encapsulates his response:
This next slide explains why and how we started our firm:
Related blog posts:
Finding Yourself as a Trader
What a Star Fund Manager Can Teach Us About Improvement
You can be better tomorrow than you are today!
Mike Bellafiore
No relevant positions