Full description not available
A**.
My Favorite - The Annotated Version of This Classic
This is a great book and an investment classic. Likely you are reading this review because someone you know and trust recommended the book to you. It is, after all, possibly the most famous investment book ever among professional investors.Reminiscences of a Stock Operator is a work of historical fiction, a roman à clef, originally published in 1923. At the time of publication, people who read about the key character, Larry Livingston, believed that to be a pseudonym for a famous securities trader of the day, Jesse Lauriston Livermore. The wisdom and knowledge of events portrayed could only come from one deeply engaged in the stock and commodity markets from late 19th to early 20th century.You can buy several modern versions of this entertaining and educational investment classic these days. There are already hundreds of reviews of this book in its various versions posted on Amazon. I have purchased and read the top three versions over the years. Rather than tread over ground that has already been thoroughly covered by others, this review focuses on the differences among versions to hopefully assist you in deciding which one to purchase.The main three print versions are these. Included are links to the Amazon page for each book.- The Wiley Investment Classic Version with Foreword by Jack Schwager, author of the Market Wizards series. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator (Wiley Investment Classics)- The MarketPlace Book with Foreword by Market Wizard William J. O'Neil, Founder of Investor's Business Daily. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator (A Marketplace Book)- The Annotated Edition by Jon D. Markman with Foreword by Market Wizard Paul Tudor Jones, Founder of Tudor Investment Corporation. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator: With New Commentary and Insights on the Life and Times of Jesse Livermore (Annotated Edition)There is also a PDF Version available online via search engines. Here are brief summaries of the differences among versions.The Wiley Investment Classic Version. This is the original book without embellishment. There are no illustrations. There is no table of contents. This version includes a short Foreword by Jack Schwager. This is the one to buy if you want the original work but cannot afford the gilded price tag of a very rare original edition. This is also possibly the best if you like to mark up a book with highlighters and make margin notes. The other two versions discussed below are more of the coffee-table book variety with high quality paper, illustrations and higher price tags.The MarketPlace Book. This book reproduces a series of 12 articles by Edwin LeFevre published in The Saturday Evening Post in 1922. It includes one installment, the first, that does not appear in the Reminiscences book. This version is richly illustrated with black and white cartoons in the Saturday Evening Post style, that is, humorous and wickedly ironic. In his Foreword William J. O'Neil says that of his thousands of investment books, Reminiscences is "one of the top 10 or 12" in his library. This is the one to buy if your objective is to see the markets as did the public in the years before the 1929 stock market crash.The Annotated Edition. This is the best of the lot in my opinion. The commentary by Jon D. Markman and the Foreword by Paul Tudor Jones, one of the most successful investors operating today and perhaps in history, make this the one to buy if your objective is investment education.The PDF Version. This is a typewritten copy of the original text of the book. You get the whole story. Personally, I find Reminiscences so valuable a reference that I want a hard copy in hand to mark up and re-read from time to time, in part or in all. You may want to read it first in PDF and then decide.This is a five star book and a must-read for every investor. Enjoy!
V**D
2 books for the price of one
Reminiscences of a stock operator is one of my favorite trading books, along with Market Wizard series. I think it is a must read for anyone involved in trading the markets. Don't be afraid that it was written almost 90 years ago. As Jesse Livermore says, Wall Street never changes, because human nature never change. There were ponzi schemes, stock manias and crashes in the '20s, now we have bernie madoff, nasdaq boom&bust and the subprime mess wich hopefully won't lead us to a '30s style depression.The annotations bring colour and life to stories and characters most of us haven't heard of before. Thus it is much easier to relate to the content and find parallels in today's markets. I really like the interview with Paul Tudor Jones at the end of the book. As a billionaire market wizard, he's most qualified in getting into Livermore's mind.To sum up, if there is a top 3 must have books for traders, this one sure makes the top.
M**S
Annotated Edition by Jon D. Markman
Aged 14, Livermore leaves his family of subsistence farmers and arrives in Boston with $5. It will be another 5 years until the first Dow Jones index, comprising of 12 stocks, is formed in 1896.Price (1891-1901)For 10 years Livermore day trades. As he says: "in a bucket shop where your margin is a shoestring you don't play for the long pulls". Bucket shops are places where no actual transactions take place (the house takes the opposite side of the bet). Bucket shops offer three advantages: instant execution, a guaranteed stop loss and lots of margin. In fact both times Livermore goes broke (and in debt the first time) he does so when trading from brokerage firms, not bucket shops. Livermore has trained himself to "read" small moves of up to 2-3% and his orders are "at the market". In the brokerage firms however (where $1000 will "only" get you $10,000 of stock), he gets terrible executions and this is the reason he goes broke both times before he turns 24 in 1901. The second time he also had to face violent price movements in Northern Pacific on Thursday May 9, 1901. The stock was cornered and went from $160 to $1000 and closed at $325 only after Morgan and Harriman reassured traders that they would not force delivery. (The ticker had a 10 minute delay from action on the floor). Again, Livermore will go to the few remaining bucket shops to make some money (which were becoming fewer by that time, until they were banned in 1915).Time (1901-1908)From here on, Livermore will try to cash in on the big bet. As he says: "A big swing will mean big money if your line is big, and to be able to swing a big line you need a big balance at your broker's." He has to change his game. His focus shifts from studying short-term price fluctuations to the study of timing longer term movements. He has to play for the long pull. To do this successfully he begins to study general conditions, including the money markets. Having mastered individual stock movements and the technical part of stock speculation he moves on to study basic principles. As he will later say, Every successful trader has to anticipate. However, in 1906 he goes broke again. To blame is his wrong timing. His outlook remains on the bear side and on borrowed money and this time he successfully shorts Great Northern in late 1906 and covers in February 1907. He then goes on a vacation to France. His trip ends abruptly when he sees the market advancing by the bull cliques "fighting desperately against conditions- against common sense and common honesty". He finds a fast boat leaving Paris for New York and shorts the market with $500,000 on margin. As he says: I certainly pushed my luck to the limit. What is the use of being right unless you get all the good possible out of it? October 24, 1907 will find him with more than $1 million. Over a period of six weeks the Panic of 1907 will net him more than $3 million. And in the spring of 1908 he will clear another $2 million in cotton.Psychology (1908-1917)Aged 31, Livermore has mastered the price and time aspects to trading. Soon he will also learn about the human factor in trading. As he says: "To learn that a man can make foolish plays for no reason whatsoever was a valuable lesson." Before 1908 ends he will lose all his money and go into debt. After meeting an influential personality of the time (likely the cotton broker Theodore Hazeltine Price) Livermore is talked into such a state of uncertainty about the markets that he loses his confidence in trading. As he says: It cost me millions to learn that another dangerous enemy to a trader is his susceptibility to the urgings of a magnetic personality when plausibly expressed by a brilliant mind. The final blow occurs in 1908 when he runs up against illness and also needs to find $200,000 in cash (to defend his brother-in-law). He goes broke by trying to make the market pay for that sum. As he says: the hope of making the stock market pay your bill is one of the most prolific sources of losses on Wall Street. In 1911, he will learn another lesson. This time he subordinates his judgment to another man's desires. That man is "Williamson" who was very nice about giving Livermore money to trade. Having made a profit of $112,000 out of a $25,000 loan, Livermore goes back to pay his creditor. Williamson, however, does not accept the money. Livermore does not insist and finds himself with a moral obligation that ties up his own hands. It is bad business, and a mistake he regrets more than any other. Allowing his gratitude to interfere with his play will be Livermore's undoing. He will lose a great opportunity to make millions, an opportunity he will not find for the next 5 years ("...five years is a long time for a man to be poor. Young or old, it is not to be relished"). The years running up (1911-1914) to World War I were rather dull. As he says: I could do without the yachts a great deal easier than I could without a market to come back on... It was the kind of market in which not even a skunk could make a scent! In 1915, vexed by debts since 1908, he voluntarily files for bankruptcy. His mind now free, he can trade with some prospects of success. In 1915 he goes back to Williamson to ask for an allowance. He will get his chance to trade and will also be lucky enough to find "the most clearly defined bull market we ever had." The DJIA will gain 82% in 1915.Livermore has caught his break and will come back big in December 1916, playing the short side. His profits will be around $800,000 to $1 million. By January 1917 rumors say that he has cleared $3.5 million recently. The Boston Daily Globe, reports him having said, I made this fortune on several issues- cotton, grain, and "war brides". This Wall Street game is a psychological one._________________In Lefevre's narrative, Livermore goes broke 4 times. The first two have to do with bad executions. He then realizes that he has to change his game and go for the long pull. He sees a big smash coming in 1907. Yet, he is a bit early in calling it, and goes broke a third time. The next time we see him lose all his money, in late 1908, he will remain in a slump for the next 5 years, until 1915. During this period he realizes that, this Wall Street game is a psychological one.The remaining of the book deals with Livermore's methods as a stock "manipulator" for other people. As he says, Stocks are manipulated to the highest point possible and then sold to the public on the way down... It is perfectly astonishing how much stock a man can get rid of on a decline. And, the public's buying capacity ... was something that they could determine only by actual tests. Sounds familiar?In the annotations we are told that Livermore will make millions in the 1929 crash but will suffer a series of setbacks following the multi-month rally of mid-1932. He will file for bankruptcy for a fourth time in 1934.PS. For a video on the 1929 crash and Livermore, see [...]
Trustpilot
1 week ago
1 month ago