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Gekko78

Would You Share?

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............As an aside - anyone ever stop to think that most fund managers do share their systems at a price. (fees) You can participate along side them without the work, share in their system for outperforming the markets! Their marketing material and due diligence documents reveal their systems openly.......All they are doing is the operational work for you.

 

Thank you Gekko, Siuya & everyone else who commented on my "offer to share"

.

I never suggested that the computer would take care of the Trading side of it. If we were going to work out something between us & fed it into a computer, we would then use it to tell us what & when to trade. Yes, there are such systems around - heaps of them, by the amount of mail I'm getting & each one claiming infallibility - all I am suggesting is that we can, between us, input what seems to work for us & program it in.

 

Look back if you would, on some of your trades where you failed miserably (if that has never happened to you, then there is no need to read on). When you studied the trade, did you not ask yourself: WHY DID I NOT SEE THAT? OF COURSE IT WASN'T GOING TO WORK! Not enough Trend, or Momentum, or Dynamics etc.

 

The intelligently programmed computer would have seen it (whatever it is). The human eye & brain can see it too, but not within the time that it takes to absorb all the info, process it & place the order on an active market.

 

That last bit is the easy one: placing the order. All I need the computer for, is to tell me what & when. As I said in my original post: Conclusion: all that's required to create the necessary computer program in our line of endeavor, is for several clever people to stick their heads together & along with an expert programmer or two, feed all their clever ideas into it. Remember, there is no limit to what a computer can absorb & calculate.

 

Or what the heck: work alongside your fund manager! I knew all along there must be an easier way.

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Fund managers outperform the markets?

 

hence my exclamation mark in the original - wondering if that would be picked up :)

 

In all fairness most fund managers think they can outperform and will show you how they do and how they beet their peers. I have plenty of friends who are fund managers who keep reminding me - and then i ask the crucial question - 'so if i invested with you how much money do i have now' - the answer is often less than i started with - BUT i had out performance!

 

As for zulu trade and rapa capital - they just seem to be an amalgamation of various small traders from what i can tell - I dont know enough to comment - interesting models - I wonder where they really make their money? spreads, commissions somewhere else?

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hence my exclamation mark in the original - wondering if that would be picked up :)

 

In all fairness most fund managers think they can outperform and will show you how they do and how they beet their peers. I have plenty of friends who are fund managers who keep reminding me - and then i ask the crucial question - 'so if i invested with you how much money do i have now' - the answer is often less than i started with - BUT i had out performance!

 

As for zulu trade and rapa capital - they just seem to be an amalgamation of various small traders from what i can tell - I dont know enough to comment - interesting models - I wonder where they really make their money? spreads, commissions somewhere else?

 

Sounds like an example of optimism bias:

This is a well-established bias in which someone’s subjective confidence in their judgments is reliably greater than their objective accuracy. Indeed, we live in an overconfident, Lake Wobegon world (“where all the women are strong, all the men are good-looking, and all the children are above average”). We are only correct about 80% of the time when we are “99% sure.” Fully 94% of college professors believe they have above-average teaching skills (anyone who has gone to college will no doubt disagree with that). Since 80% of drivers say that their driving skills are above average, I guess none of them drive on the freeway when I do. While 70% of high school students claim to have above-average leadership skills, only 2% say they are below average, no doubt taught by above average math teachers. In a truly terrifying survey result, 92% students said they were of good character and 79% said that their character was better than most people even though 27% of those same students admitted stealing from a store within the prior year and 60% said they had cheated on an exam.

Or perhaps cognitive dissonance.

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hence my exclamation mark in the original - wondering if that would be picked up :)

 

In all fairness most fund managers think they can outperform and will show you how they do and how they beet their peers. I have plenty of friends who are fund managers who keep reminding me - and then i ask the crucial question - 'so if i invested with you how much money do i have now' - the answer is often less than i started with - BUT i had out performance!

 

As for zulu trade and rapa capital - they just seem to be an amalgamation of various small traders from what i can tell - I dont know enough to comment - interesting models - I wonder where they really make their money? spreads, commissions somewhere else?

 

zulutrade makes their money off of commissions per trade. They hook up to the broker's trading servers via api and copy trades directly from the signal provider's account to the zulutrade / follower's account. The follower either has to get a new account from the broker via their Introducing Broker partnership, or if you do not want to sign up for a new account, you have to sign an agreement to add an additional commission in order to accept the trades via zulutrade. You are ranked based on your performance while you are connected to zulutrade, and they are pretty good about showing you actual performance, to prevent people from trying to earn commissions only based on making a lot of senseless trades.

 

MyFxBook is going to introduce a copy trades solution, but they will only pay for winning trades, not all trades to prevent the commission hunters.

 

Rapa is more of a traditional fund broker who links up fund managers/traders with those with capital. They split a 2% management / 20% performance fee with the trader. You have to have live performance, and then you only get paid when you increase the account beyond the original balance and there may be other "hurdle" performance restrictions, to prevent traders from having a large drawdown, then increasing the balance, then getting paid on the increase-after-drawdown.

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Lots of people share their trading methods.

I know of 5 profitable systems/methods disclosed in this very forum. Free for the taking. But you have to take time to read the posts. It is not a push button thing, and it is definitely not something you can learn in 5 posts or less.

Give me a hint maybe a couple links to the threads please. Thank you.

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seems to me we are deviating from the original purpose of this thread. Would you share?

 

what's to share? does any one of us possess the perfect system? myself, offering to cooperate in the creation of it, preferably via a sophisticated computer program.

 

for starters, that's what we need to share! by pooling our knowledge & experience.

 

Myself, using a point system .. based on dynamics, MA's, various indicators as well as trends & bends. on charts that is, not news or fundamentals. OK to trade if I achieve 9 points out of 12. it works quite well for me, but it is slow & primitive.

 

compared to what can be done, in order to achieve the perfect signals. the computer can be programmed to keep an eye on any number of items (myself specializing in Forex at the moment) and to analyze fifty or more clues & to give the go-ahead, all this within a couple of seconds.

 

always provided it's been fed the right methods. back to my comparison with a super chess computer: the grandmasters who program it, teach it a few standard openings, all the moves & all the rules & regulations - we are looking at a few hundred of them, maybe more.

 

whereupon it looks seven or eight moves ahead within seconds & beats its own mentors easily! that's the skill we've got to apply to the market.

Edited by amory

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seems to me we are deviating from the original purpose of this thread. Would you share?

 

what's to share? does any one of us possess the perfect system? myself, offering to cooperate in the creation of it, preferably via a sophisticated computer program.

What is a perfect system?

 

 

for starters, that's what we need to share! by pooling our knowledge & experience.

Ok

Myself, using a point system .. based on dynamics, MA's, various indicators as well as trends & bends. on charts that is, not news or fundamentals. OK to trade if I achieve 9 points out of 12. it works quite well for me, but it is slow & primitive.

My experience is all that stuff you just mentioned doesn't work. It is probably the most inefficient way to trade or even look at markets. I am not saying it is not logical. However I bet everything you are using is lagging. You will always be at least 2 steps behind. Because of this you will have more risk per trade. You will have larger draw downs. And you want to have a computer trade for you?

 

 

compared to what can be done, in order to achieve the perfect signals. the computer can be programmed to keep an eye on any number of items (myself specializing in Forex at the moment) and to analyze fifty or more clues & to give the go-ahead, all this within a couple of seconds.

/facepalm.... Everything you mentioned so far is retail type of thinking. All we need to do is throw in a few popular catch phrases and we have ourselves a common trading room. My guess is that you are trolling. But if you are not...

 

The problem with computers is that markets are dominated by people. Its mostly people that trade markets. I know its not popular what I am saying. However computers don't act like people. They don't think like people. And most importantly they don't trade like people. So far as I know man has not found a way to teach a computer to feel. Computers work well when you get to the point where you are missing more good trades then you take bad trades. And when you get to that point then you are still better hiring someone to take the trades you are missing. The reason is that computers don't trade like humans.

 

Analyzing 50 or more clues in your situation wont help you. Just from what you presented so far it looks like you don't know what to look for. Looking at 50 random things might help. Might not. Seems like shooting in the dark. Here are some ideas.

 

Can you do what you do in Forex in the Future market? Do you need the large stop out? Are you using correlated markets? Are you looking at the bid/ask? Can you really say you have an advantage over others in the markets you attempt to trade?

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What is a perfect system?

 

Ok

 

My experience is all that stuff you just mentioned doesn't work. It is probably the most inefficient way to trade or even look at markets. I am not saying it is not logical. However I bet everything you are using is lagging. You will always be at least 2 steps behind. Because of this you will have more risk per trade. You will have larger draw downs. And you want to have a computer trade for you?

 

/facepalm.... Everything you mentioned so far is retail type of thinking. All we need to do is throw in a few popular catch phrases and we have ourselves a common trading room. My guess is that you are trolling. But if you are not...

 

The problem with computers is that markets are dominated by people. Its mostly people that trade markets. I know its not popular what I am saying. However computers don't act like people. They don't think like people. And most importantly they don't trade like people. So far as I know man has not found a way to teach a computer to feel. Computers work well when you get to the point where you are missing more good trades then you take bad trades. And when you get to that point then you are still better hiring someone to take the trades you are missing. The reason is that computers don't trade like humans.

 

Analyzing 50 or more clues in your situation wont help you. Just from what you presented so far it looks like you don't know what to look for. Looking at 50 random things might help. Might not. Seems like shooting in the dark. Here are some ideas.

 

Can you do what you do in Forex in the Future market? Do you need the large stop out? Are you using correlated markets? Are you looking at the bid/ask? Can you really say you have an advantage over others in the markets you attempt to trade?

 

Hi there Colonel! I like your aggressive attitude .. a military background, no doubt. I reckon there is nothing like a direct confrontation to clear the air.

 

What would you rather do? confront an enemy force that by far outnumbers you .. but you can see them, fight them! or drive your humvee thru a minefield or maybe into a roadside bomb trap, hoping for the best? Your answer will reveal a lot about how you handle the market.

 

The suggestion that I am trolling .. I find that insulting. I am merely offering a practical suggestion .. if some of you guys find it of value, go ahead & use it & leave me out, it makes no difference to me.

 

Do I have an advantage over others in the markets I attempt to trade .. reply negative. But I keep trying to learn from every mistake & to improve on the methodology as best I can.

 

Note: I never said that the computer should do the trading (for myself alone or for a group with collective input) .. only the resulting system would be SHARED (that's the operative word, is it not?)

 

but it would still be up to the individual participant to make up his/ her mind whether to act on it.

 

Finally, back to my comparison with chess computers: Bobby Fischer who was a chess genius, said similar to what you are saying .. ("... man has not found a way to teach a computer to feel.") He worded it somewhat differently: that a computer has no imagination, that chess is to a great extent a game requiring intuition .. well, he's been proved wrong! I wonder have they as yet been able to teach a computer to learn from its mistakes???

 

Anyway, I am glad we are at least discussing it .. like the middle east peace talks, it may lead nowhere, but it should be done!

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Discussing it? I thought we were trying to talk you out of it.

Middle East "peace talks".....oh, is that what they are? How does that go then? Israel..they get to keep their nukes (the ones they dont officially admit they have) and if they fire them on Iran that will save the US invading.Now the rest of you guys stop bitching about some other country we planted on your land a few decades ago,and stop begrudging the extra land they're helping themselves to as and when they feel like it contary to international laws.And we're not really moved by the sight of dead palestinians,even children,only Israeli children killed whenever Hezbollah fires a few rockets 'cos we decided Hezbollah are the bad guys.Shame all you countries are sitting on so much oil,otherwise i guess we could happily let you all kill each other.And now,...back to those peace talks.

Ok,back to your "practical suggestion".You underestimate the unintended consequences of getting a computor (lets call him Hal 9000) to work with half a dozen conflicting ideas.Have you seen your computor freeze sometimes when you ask it to do several things at once?...so you know it's a very real phenomena.

If you are going to compete with HFT (which you are patently not,since you mention lagging old indicators) then taking things to their logical conclusion ie trading even faster than micro seconds,you'll actually be buying and selling at exactly the same moment.This will result in Hal 9000 reacting in one of 2 ways.Either he will freeze or he will refuse to comply with your wishes and will,instead attempt to protect you from yourself.

"Hal,sell short 5 contracts"

"I'm afraid i can't do that Dave"

"HAL,5 CONTRACTS SHORT!"

(silence)

"Ok Hal, i'll do it manually"

"You're going to find that a little difficult without the express permission of you partners Dave"

"HAL...5 contract short"

"I'm sorry Dave,but this conversation can no longer serve any useful purpose"

 

This thread will now self destruct in...T minus 2 days

 

Thanks Mitsubishi! that is most instructive & entertaining. But I feel that both your political views & your gift for clever dialogue are misplaced in the context of this thread.

 

Where you tell us that a computer will freeze if given a multitude of tasks .. good thing the people who send out probes to explore the planet Mars & beyond never knew that.

 

Because compared to that effort, teaching a computer to do what we are trying to do .. beat the market .. should be child's play. I will concede one point: the program has to be reasonably intelligent. In other words, the team .. uh-oh here he goes trolling again, would have to more or less agree on the basic principles they're going to teach poor old HAL. No use overtaxing his simplistic brain.

 

P.S. the Japanese when they invaded Manchuria & Nanking back in 1937, they didn't worry too much about international law. That's not their car you're driving, is it?

Edited by amory

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So in keeping with the original question I posted here I decided to do an experiment.

 

A friend of mine has been bugging me for about a year to "help" him trade his futures account. ( basically tell him how I make money)

 

After countless "No , it is something you need to learn on your own" stuff........I decided to give it to him.

 

2 weeks ago showed him EXACTLY how I trade the futures market. I left nothing out....nothing.

 

 

So he called me yesterday saying that I either lied to him or just made up what I told him because he lost almost all of his money doing what I told him.

 

 

I am guessing that his emotions got to him since I am usually in and out in less than 5 minutes if even that ....maybe even 1 minute. Plus he came from the FX market , as I did when I first started futures , but he did not take the time to learn.

 

I gave him what he asked for .....

 

One thing that I always said to him and continue to say is " You cannot quantum leap to success"

 

So perhaps a profitable strategy can be shared with others as I expect about 50% of them will screw it up anyway and move on to the next "grail"

 

P.S.--- NO I will NOT share it with you either!!

Have a nice day :)

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So in keeping with the original question I posted here I decided to do an experiment.

 

A friend of mine has been bugging me for about a year to "help" him trade his futures account. ( basically tell him how I make money)

 

After countless "No , it is something you need to learn on your own" stuff........I decided to give it to him.

 

2 weeks ago showed him EXACTLY how I trade the futures market. I left nothing out....nothing.

 

 

So he called me yesterday saying that I either lied to him or just made up what I told him because he lost almost all of his money doing what I told him.

 

 

I am guessing that his emotions got to him since I am usually in and out in less than 5 minutes if even that ....maybe even 1 minute. Plus he came from the FX market , as I did when I first started futures , but he did not take the time to learn.

 

I gave him what he asked for .....

 

One thing that I always said to him and continue to say is " You cannot quantum leap to success"

 

So perhaps a profitable strategy can be shared with others as I expect about 50% of them will screw it up anyway and move on to the next "grail"

 

P.S.--- NO I will NOT share it with you either!!

Have a nice day :)

Brilliant example of what happens when someone comes to the markets more keen to make money than they are to learn the method.

 

That would have been me at the beginning too ... and I paid some dues ... oh Yeah!

 

And still pay some!

 

Good judgement

Comes from Experience

Experience comes from

Bad judgement

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So in keeping with the original question I posted here I decided to do an experiment.

 

A friend of mine has been bugging me for about a year to "help" him trade his futures account. ( basically tell him how I make money)

 

After countless "No , it is something you need to learn on your own" stuff........I decided to give it to him.

 

2 weeks ago showed him EXACTLY how I trade the futures market. I left nothing out....nothing.

 

 

So he called me yesterday saying that I either lied to him or just made up what I told him because he lost almost all of his money doing what I told him.

 

 

I am guessing that his emotions got to him since I am usually in and out in less than 5 minutes if even that ....maybe even 1 minute. Plus he came from the FX market , as I did when I first started futures , but he did not take the time to learn.

 

I gave him what he asked for .....

 

One thing that I always said to him and continue to say is " You cannot quantum leap to success"

 

So perhaps a profitable strategy can be shared with others as I expect about 50% of them will screw it up anyway and move on to the next "grail"

 

P.S.--- NO I will NOT share it with you either!!

Have a nice day :)

 

I felt compelled to comment on this as I meant to make a similar comment earlier on in the thread. One of the things that made the original turtle trader experiment so interesting was that not all of the turtles were successful, even though:

 

- the group selected to be turtles went through a fairly rigorous selection process.

- they all had direct access to the master trader's strategy, in a clearly laid out form.

- they were supervised at different levels of advancement in the program; all had the ability to ask questions, seek direct guidance whenever they had problems.

- it wasn't even their money that was being traded [so financially they had nothing to 'lose']

- not sure, but I think they even got some minimum compensation for their efforts.

 

But Curtis summed it up nicely:

 

......"In fact, I knew that most of those who spent thousands to learn

these heretofore secret [turtle] rules would end up disappointed, for three reasons:

• The rules wouldn’t be clear, since the people selling them didn’t know how to

trade.

• Even if they were clearly presented, the buyers probably wouldn’t be able to

follow the rules.

• Most of the Turtles are now trading even better rules....... "

 

In addition to the link above, i decided to just attach the rules here for easy reference.

 

I take a different stance on sharing "the secret" with others, so I don't know what to say about the folks trying to keep up this mystique about trading successfully. Seems to just be adding or rehashing the superstitions to managing risk, and those wanting safety and security are drawn to these mysterious methods. I commend Curtis for bringing not just the strategy, but the overall mindset of a successful strategy to light; this is how you counter the falsehoods.

 

Kind of like the internet marketing thing. If you help your clients get to, or closer to, their goal, wouldn't they just naturally pay you to do this?

turtlerules.pdf

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So I wanted to pose a question to the forum and get some feedback.

 

Now to start off we all no there is no such thing as the "Holy Grail" in trading unless you posses a Delorean and your flux capacitor is fluxing.

 

Nothing is 100% , but let us suppose for a second that you discovered a trading method that proved to be 90% accurate over the past say 2-3 years. You have back tested , forward tested , traded it on a live account and have done quite well for yourself. The method does not require HUGE risk taking.....a simple S/L strategy of no more than 10 ticks. It does require manual action , not a trading robot. ( I am sure one could be created but for the purposes of this question there is not one)

 

If you possessed such a strategy , would you share it with others? Now the catch is if you decide to share it with even 1 person , it will start to die ver quickly and no longer . Seeing as how people say if everyone finds out about a winning system and starts to use it , it will no longer work.

 

Would you share it with anyone seeing as how it will eventually cease to work?

Or would you keep it to yourself ?

 

Now many I have asked would say "well I would make money until I had what I needed then share it" If that is your answer then How much is enough? Would you pick and arbitrary number and once you hit ...stop? Most people have a number but once they reach it the number increases and so on and so on.

 

The 2 reasons why the "get what I need then stop" may not work:

 

1) humans are greedy by nature , when we have what we want , we tend to want more.Not all but most.

2) the number you you need now will more than likely change over time..( remember when you were a teenager and $35,000 a year was awesome and you would be independently wealthy if you made that much)

 

No I wouldnt share but ask them to trade under my instructions and pay me if profitable.

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Well ... I've had a change of heart ... I'm sharing ... and I'm sharing my strategy publicly.

 

http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/forex-trading-laboratory/15784-how-trade-foreign-exchange-market-forex.html'>http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/forex-trading-laboratory/15784-how-trade-foreign-exchange-market-forex.html

 

Let's see who can do what now. :missy:

 

Let's put a few theories to the test, and see how willing and able people are, to follow a method that is working quite well.

 

Let's see my strategy fail now because 400,000 people will now be using it, and it will no longer work profitably. :rofl:

 

Let's see the brokers changing things so the strategy doesn't work any more.

 

What I am thinking is that we may see people UNABLE to help themselves - they may want to tweak, change, add, subtract, detract from and add to the approach, until it no longer resembles the original.

 

The theories are now under the microscope.

 

http://www.traderslaboratory.com/forums/forex-trading-laboratory/15784-how-trade-foreign-exchange-market-forex.html

5aa711c2a0026_ShowmetheMonnai.jpg.eec653d671740683c28352d36de617a4.jpg

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Regarding the turtles, I watched a youtube video on one of them giving a lecture. No offence meant to the guy but while he was giving the lecture and talking to the audience (who were all there to learn how to trade from one of the 'legendary turtles'), he didn't strike me as all that bright. Certainly nothing special.

 

It got me thinking that perhaps the reason for his making money using the strategy, was that he has more of a 'follower' type personality (if there is such a thing). He was able to take the information given to him from his superiors and do it, and keep doing it, and didn't question authority even when things went wrong (like in the Milgram experiment). Maybe that's why 'average' people are supposed to do ok at trading – they keep doing something that works.

 

Although... if they're average, how would they go about figuring out what works in the first place? You have to be a bit different, otherwise you'll be the same as everyone else – which would mean you're in the majority. Which is the right place to be at some times, and is disastrous at other times.

 

Also, if they're average, what happens when the markets change, how do they figure out that the markets are different and that it may be time to adapt their strategy? Maybe that's why he's now giving lectures. Who knows.

 

I think you need intelligence to figure out what works for you, you need to be able to admit when you're wrong (be humble), while being able to carry on in the face of adversity, having confidence in yourself (or system) that if things go wrong you can always change or adapt. Perhaps you need to be a follower, but a follower of yourself.

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Regarding the turtles, I watched a youtube video on one of them giving a lecture. No offence meant to the guy but while he was giving the lecture and talking to the audience (who were all there to learn how to trade from one of the 'legendary turtles'), he didn't strike me as all that bright. Certainly nothing special.

 

It got me thinking that perhaps the reason for his making money using the strategy, was that he has more of a 'follower' type personality (if there is such a thing). He was able to take the information given to him from his superiors and do it, and keep doing it, and didn't question authority even when things went wrong (like in the Milgram experiment). Maybe that's why 'average' people are supposed to do ok at trading – they keep doing something that works.

 

 

You are right Perrin - maybe the key is in finding out and admitting you are average...nothing wrong with that.

 

There are a couple of different folks who gave lectures who were traders re the Turtles....there is a lot of arguments over why, who, how what worked. Not worth it to go there, but i would say that one of the best things i read about it was an admittance by Curtis Faith (I think) in that he realised that at the time when it started he was successful in the program because his job was not to do anything but follow his instructions - his job was to be a robot.

After that once you have learnt a system, understood it, and made it successful - whats wrong with tailoring it to suit your needs or personality or strengths.

 

Robert Greene wrote a recent book about mastery - as a brief summary - do your time, learn your craft, and then show your mastery.

Everyone wants a quick fix, easy answers , everyone wants to be master of their craft in a day. Does not happen (except for through the outliers in large numbers)

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Regarding the turtles, I watched a youtube video on one of them giving a lecture. No offence meant to the guy but while he was giving the lecture and talking to the audience (who were all there to learn how to trade from one of the 'legendary turtles'), he didn't strike me as all that bright. Certainly nothing special.

 

It got me thinking that perhaps the reason for his making money using the strategy, was that he has more of a 'follower' type personality (if there is such a thing). He was able to take the information given to him from his superiors and do it, and keep doing it, and didn't question authority even when things went wrong (like in the Milgram experiment). Maybe that's why 'average' people are supposed to do ok at trading – they keep doing something that works.

 

Although... if they're average, how would they go about figuring out what works in the first place? You have to be a bit different, otherwise you'll be the same as everyone else – which would mean you're in the majority. Which is the right place to be at some times, and is disastrous at other times.

 

Also, if they're average, what happens when the markets change, how do they figure out that the markets are different and that it may be time to adapt their strategy? Maybe that's why he's now giving lectures. Who knows.

 

I think you need intelligence to figure out what works for you, you need to be able to admit when you're wrong (be humble), while being able to carry on in the face of adversity, having confidence in yourself (or system) that if things go wrong you can always change or adapt. Perhaps you need to be a follower, but a follower of yourself.

 

Perhaps he was intelligent enough to faithfully follow the TT system but not smart enough to figure out what to do when it bombed.

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    • there is no avoiding loses to be honest, its just how the market is. you win some and hopefully more, but u do lose some. 
    • Date: 11th July 2025.   Demand For Gold Rises As Trump Announces Tariffs!   Gold prices rose significantly throughout the week as investors took advantage of the 2.50% lower entry level. Investors also return to the safe-haven asset as the US trade policy continues to escalate. As a result, investors are taking a more dovish tone. The ‘risk-off’ appetite is also something which can be seen within the stock market. The NASDAQ on Thursday took a 0.90% dive within only 30 minutes.   Trade Tensions Escalate President Trump has been teasing with new tariffs throughout the week. However, the tariffs were confirmed on Thursday. A 35% tariff on Canadian imports starting August 1st, along with 50% tariffs on copper and goods from Brazil. Some experts are advising that Brazil has been specifically targeted due to its association with the BRICS.   However, the President has not directly associated the tariffs with BRICS yet. According to President Trump, Brazil is targeting US technology companies and carrying out a ‘witch hunt’against former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, a close ally who is currently facing prosecution for allegedly attempting to overturn the 2022 Brazilian election.   Although Brazil is one of the largest and fastest-growing economies in the Americas, it is not the main concern for investors. Investors are more concerned about Tariffs on Canada. The White House said it will impose a 35% tariff on Canadian imports, effective August 1st, raised from the earlier 25% rate. This covers most goods, with exceptions under USMCA and exemptions for Canadian companies producing within the US.   It is also vital for investors to note that Canada is among the US;’s top 3 trading partners. The increase was justified by Trump citing issues like the trade deficit, Canada’s handling of fentanyl trafficking, and perceived unfair trade practices.   The President is also threatening new measures against the EU. These moves caused US and European stock futures to fall nearly 1%, while the Dollar rose and commodity prices saw small gains. However, the main benefactor was Silver and Gold, which are the two best-performing metals of the day.   How Will The Fed Impact Gold? The FOMC indicated that the number of members warming up to the idea of interest rate cuts is increasing. If the Fed takes a dovish tone, the price of Gold may further rise. In the meantime, the President pushing for a 3% rate cut sparked talk of a more dovish Fed nominee next year and raised worries about future inflation.   Meanwhile, jobless claims dropped for the fourth straight week, coming in better than expected and supporting the view that the labour market remains strong after last week’s solid payroll report. Markets still expect two rate cuts this year, but rate futures show most investors see no change at the next Fed meeting. Gold is expected to finish the week mostly flat.       Gold 15-Minute Chart     If the price of Gold increases above $3,337.50, buy signals are likely to materialise again. However, the price is currently retracing, meaning traders are likely to wait for regained momentum before entering further buy trades. According to HSBC, they expect an average price of $3,215 in 2025 (up from $3,015) and $3,125 in 2026, with projections showing a volatile range between $3,100 and $3,600   Key Takeaway Points: Gold Rises on Safe-Haven Demand. Gold gained as investors reacted to rising trade tensions and market volatility. Canada Tariffs Spark Concern. A 35% tariff on Canadian imports drew attention due to Canada’s key trade role. Fed Dovish Shift Supports Gold. Growing expectations of rate cuts and Trump’s push for a 3% cut boosted the gold outlook. Gold Eyes Breakout Above $3,337.5. Price is consolidating; a move above $3,337.50 could trigger new buy signals. Always trade with strict risk management. Your capital is the single most important aspect of your trading business.   Please note that times displayed based on local time zone and are from time of writing this report.   Click HERE to access the full HFM Economic calendar.   Want to learn to trade and analyse the markets? Join our webinars and get analysis and trading ideas combined with better understanding of how markets work. Click HERE to register for FREE!   Click HERE to READ more Market news.   Michalis Efthymiou HFMarkets   Disclaimer: This material is provided as a general marketing communication for information purposes only and does not constitute an independent investment research. Nothing in this communication contains, or should be considered as containing, an investment advice or an investment recommendation or a solicitation for the purpose of buying or selling of any financial instrument. All information provided is gathered from reputable sources and any information containing an indication of past performance is not a guarantee or reliable indicator of future performance. Users acknowledge that any investment in Leveraged Products is characterized by a certain degree of uncertainty and that any investment of this nature involves a high level of risk for which the users are solely responsible and liable. We assume no liability for any loss arising from any investment made based on the information provided in this communication. This communication must not be reproduced or further distributed without our prior written permission.
    • Back in the early 2000s, Netflix mailed DVDs to subscribers.   It wasn’t sexy—but it was smart. No late fees. No driving to Blockbuster.   People subscribed because they were lazy. Investors bought the stock because they realized everyone else is lazy too.   Those who saw the future in that red envelope? They could’ve caught a 10,000%+ move.   Another story…   Back in the mid-2000s, Amazon launched Prime.   It wasn’t flashy—but it was fast.   Free two-day shipping. No minimums. No hassle.   People subscribed because they were impatient. Investors bought the stock because they realized everyone hates waiting.   Those who saw the future in that speedy little yellow button? They could’ve caught another 10,000%+ move.   Finally…   Back in 2011, Bitcoin was trading under $10.   It wasn’t regulated—but it worked.   No bank. No middleman. Just wallet to wallet.   People used it to send money. Investors bought it because they saw the potential.   Those who saw something glimmering in that strange orange coin? They could’ve caught a 100,000%+ move.   The people who made those calls weren’t fortune tellers. They just noticed something simple before others did.   A better way. A quiet shift. A small edge. An asymmetric bet.   The red envelope fixed late fees. The yellow button fixed waiting. The orange coin gave billions a choice.   Of course, these types of gains are rare. And they happen only once in a blue moon. That’s exactly why it’s important to notice when the conditions start to look familiar.   Not after the move. Not once it's on CNBC. But in the quiet build-up— before the surface breaks.   Enter the Blue Button Please read more here: https://altucherconfidential.com/posts/netflix-amazon-bitcoin-blue  Profits from free accurate cryptos signals: https://www.predictmag.com/ 
    • What These Attacks Look Like There are several ways you could get hacked. And the threats compound by the day.   Here’s a quick rundown:   Phishing: Fake emails from your “bank.” Click the link, give your password—game over.   Ransomware: Malware that locks your files and demands crypto. Pay up, or it’s gone.   DDoS: Overwhelm a website with traffic until it crashes. Like 10,000 bots blocking the door. Often used by nations.   Man-in-the-Middle: Hackers intercept your messages on public WiFi and read or change them.   Social Engineering: Hackers pose as IT or drop infected USB drives labeled “Payroll.”   You don’t need to be “important” to be a target.   You just need to be online.   What You Can Do (Without Buying a Bunker) You don’t have to be tech-savvy.   You just need to stop being low-hanging fruit.   Here’s how:   Use a YubiKey (physical passkey device) or Authenticator app – Ditch text message 2FA. SIM swaps are real. Hackers often have people on the inside at telecom companies.   Use a password manager (with Yubikey) – One unique password per account. Stop using your dog’s name.   Update your devices – Those annoying updates patch real security holes. Use them.   Back up your files – If ransomware hits, you don’t want your important documents held hostage.   Avoid public WiFi for sensitive stuff – Or use a VPN.   Think before you click – Emails that feel “urgent” are often fake. Go to the websites manually for confirmation.   Consider Starlink in case the internet goes down – I think it’s time for me to make the leap. Don’t Panic. Prepare. (Then Invest.)   I spent an hour in that basement bar reading about cyberattacks—and watching real-world systems fall apart like dominos.   The internet going down used to be an inconvenience. Now, it’s a warning.   Cyberwar isn’t coming. It’s here.   And the next time your internet goes out, it might not just be your router.   Don’t panic. Prepare.   And maybe keep a backup plan in your back pocket. Like a local basement bar with good bourbon—and working WiFi.   As usual, we’re on the lookout for more opportunities in cybersecurity. Stay tuned.   Author: Chris Campbell (AltucherConfidential) Profits from free accurate cryptos signals: https://www.predictmag.com/   
    • DUMBSHELL:  re the automation of corruption ---  200,000 "Science Papers" in academic journal database PubMed may have been AI-generated with errors, hallucinations and false sourcing 
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