保罗·都铎·琼斯简介_保罗·都铎·琼斯交易风格和利益趋向
保罗·都铎·琼斯简介
保罗·都铎·琼斯二世(生于1954年9月28日,田纳西州孟菲斯 ),知名对冲基金经理 。2006年盈利7.5亿美元, 总资产估计为28亿美元,在2009年《福布斯》全球亿万富豪排行榜中排名224位。
For elementary school, Jones went to Presbyterian Day School before attending Memphis University School for high school and then University of Virginia, earning an undergraduate degree in economics in 1976 as well as a welterweight boxing championship.
In 1976 he started working on the trading floors as a clerk and then became a broker for E.F. Hutton. In 1980 he went strictly on his own for two and a half profitable years, but "really got bored." He then applied to Harvard Business School, was accepted, and packed to go when the idea occurred to him that: "this is crazy, because for what I'm doing here, they're not going to teach me anything. This skill set is not something that they teach in business school."
He consulted his cousin, William Dunavant Jr., for advice. Dunavant, whose Dunavant Enterprises is one of the world's largest cotton merchants, sent Jones down to New Orleans to talk with commodity broker Eli Tullis, who hired and mentored him to trade cotton futures at the New York Cotton Exchange.
保罗·都铎·琼斯交易风格和利益趋向
As reported in Market Wizards, Jones futures trading style and beliefs are summarized as follows [8]:
Contrarian attempt to buy and sell turning points. Keeps trying the single trade idea until he changes his mind, fundamentally. Otherwise, he keeps cutting his position size down. Then he trades the smallest amount when his trading is at its worst.
Considers himself as a premier market opportunist. When he develops an idea he pursues it from a very-low-risk standpoint until he has been proven wrong repeatedly, or until he changes his viewpoint.
Swing trader, the best money is made at the market turns. Has missed a lot of meat in the middle, but catches a lot of tops and bottoms.
Spends his day making himself happy and relaxed. Gets out if a losing position is making him uncomfortable. Nothing’s better than a fresh start. Key is to play great defense, not great offense.
Never average losers. Decreases his trading size when he is doing poorly, increase when he is trading well.
He has mental stops. If it hits that number, he is out no matter what. He uses not only price stops, but time stops.
Monitors the whole portfolio equity (risk) in realtime.
He believes prices move first and fundamentals come second.
He doesn’t care about mistakes made 3 seconds ago, but what he is going to do from the next moment on.
Don't be a hero. Don't have an ego. Always question yourself and your ability. Don’t ever feel that you are very good. The second you do, you are dead.


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