I think it was Jesse Livermore who used to guarantee he could take any stock no matter how badly it was performing and get out at higher prices. Jesse knew that getting a stock's price to rise required some extra volume which is what his sales would create and Jesse knew that getting the price heading higher also required buying back some of these same shares that you just sold at a higher price.
Jesse's advice involving insiders
Lesson Two: Do not depend your analysis solely on "insider information." Livermore learned this lesson the hard way - twice in all. The first lesson was moderately costly; the second lesson was to cost him his entire fortune:
Nice huge distribution spike there in the middle of June, obviously if sales are off over 21% for the month you have a very good idea that they are going to be off at the half-way point in the month. After the huge distribution spike that Jesse tells us is required GM launches for a quick 30% gain in the stock price, leading up to the June sales after-hours announcement, GM off only 1% after hours thanks to every trader leaving a little early today for the 4th of July Holiday. I'm sure a lot of thought went into when the announcement would be made, once again proving how big a role the media plays in this congame. You can't get anymore blatant than this manipulation and I'm sure nothing will become of it. I certainly feel sorry for those who view the stock market as an investment and not a casino.
This is the type of crap that I could put up with when it involved $5 petfood companies and 50 cent penny stocks from Toronto and Salt Lake City, but now we've reached the point where even GM is a manipulated stock and nothing is done about it. Incredible, buyer beware, Wall Street might find it more difficult getting the suckers back to the table next time, but I guess we've been dumbed down to the point that's not going to be a problem.
Jesse's advice involving insiders
Lesson Two: Do not depend your analysis solely on "insider information." Livermore learned this lesson the hard way - twice in all. The first lesson was moderately costly; the second lesson was to cost him his entire fortune:
- Livermore had always been skeptical about the dependability on "insider information." After all, why would top management tell outsiders that he was selling shares in his own company because he thinks business will be bad going forward (these were the days before insider-trading was made illegal)? Telling outsiders would only add more selling pressure to the stock, and vice-versa. The legendary trader, Bernard Baruch, had always maintained that insider information was useless, and that a person was doing him a favor if he would keep the insider information to himself and not reveal it to him. Livermore got his first real lesson sometime after he closed out his profitable short position in Union Pacific right before the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake. After three days of tape-watching, he concluded that the shares of Union Pacific were being accumulated. He started to accumulate shares in Union Pacific as well - only to be stopped by Ed Hutton, the great New York financier and owner of the E.F. Hutton brokerage house, and a personal friend. Hutton told Livermore that he had inside information and that the insiders have set up a pool and were dumping shares to him at a furious rate. Sooner or later, Union Pacific is going to tank. Despite his own beliefs and the reinforcements of all those beliefs from years of tape-watching, Livermore liquidated his 5,000 shares of Union Pacific at $162 - making only $10,000 in the process. The next day, the company announced a 10% dividend and the shares shot up by an additional ten points. The opportunity cost? $50,000 in additional profits which would be equivalent to over one million dollars today. Livermore did not get upset or emotional, but after this incident, he swore that he will never listen to insider information again and that he will only trust his tape-watching skills and instincts from now on.
- The second lesson that was handed down to Livermore did not strictly involve insider information, although it was pretty darn close to it. It also taught Livermore a little about himself - his gullibility and his succumbing to another man's sale skills even though he practically knew all the facts of a product (in this case, it was the cotton industry). Let me clarify. This happened soon after the Panic of 1907 - when Livermore was trading successfully at a peak level and soon after he made a small fortune by nearly cornering the cotton market. Some weeks before, a man named Percy Thomas (who was also know as the "Cotton King") had gone bankrupt in trying to corner the Cotton market, and hearing Livermore's exploits, Thomas would seek him out and ask Livermore to be his partner. Livermore refused to be Thomas' partner since he had always played a lone hand. However, Thomas was a man of knowledge (particularly in the cotton market, of course - where he supposedly had "spies" that would report crop conditions and the like to him as soon as they could) and a great charmer, and Livermore was soon put under his spell. Prior to Livermore meeting Thomas, Livermore was short cotton. After a month of listening to Thomas and falling under his spell, Livermore covered his short position and went long. This was the beginning of Livermore's downfall. With his judgment clouded, Livermore continued to average down on his long position even as Cotton fell. He even sold out his profitable wheat position in order to maintain his margin requirements in cotton and to even buy more cotton on the way down. After realizing what had happened, Livermore soon sold out - with a stake of only $300,000 left - 10% of what he had only some months ago. Livermore sold his apartment and his yacht and tried to recoup his losses in the stock market. By this time, however, his emotions were running wild and his trading skills were shot. Soon thereafter, Livermore was broke once again - not only losing his remaining stake of $300,000 - but now, he was in debt to the tune of over one million dollars. Livermore would ultimately establish himself once again, but this lesson further reinforced his beliefs that he should always play a lone hand, and that he should never tell anyone what he was doing or ask otherwise.
Nice huge distribution spike there in the middle of June, obviously if sales are off over 21% for the month you have a very good idea that they are going to be off at the half-way point in the month. After the huge distribution spike that Jesse tells us is required GM launches for a quick 30% gain in the stock price, leading up to the June sales after-hours announcement, GM off only 1% after hours thanks to every trader leaving a little early today for the 4th of July Holiday. I'm sure a lot of thought went into when the announcement would be made, once again proving how big a role the media plays in this congame. You can't get anymore blatant than this manipulation and I'm sure nothing will become of it. I certainly feel sorry for those who view the stock market as an investment and not a casino.
This is the type of crap that I could put up with when it involved $5 petfood companies and 50 cent penny stocks from Toronto and Salt Lake City, but now we've reached the point where even GM is a manipulated stock and nothing is done about it. Incredible, buyer beware, Wall Street might find it more difficult getting the suckers back to the table next time, but I guess we've been dumbed down to the point that's not going to be a problem.
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