英语听力 学英语,练听力,上听力课堂! 注册 登录
> 在线听力 > 有声读物 > 世界名著 > 译林版·股票大作手回忆录 >  第17篇

双语·股票大作手回忆录 第十七章

所属教程:译林版·股票大作手回忆录

浏览:

2022年05月06日

手机版
扫描二维码方便学习和分享

ONE of my most intimate friends is very fond of telling stories about what he calls my hunches.He is forever ascribing to me powers that defy analysis.Ile declares I merely follow blindly certain mysterious impulses and thereby get out of the stock market at precisely the right time.His pet yarn is about a black cat that told me,at his breakfast-table,to sell a lot of stock I was carrying,and that after I got the pussy's message I was grouchy and nervous until I sold every share I was long of.I got practically the top prices of the movement,which of course strengthened the hunch theory of my hard-headed friend.

I had gone to Washington to endeavor to convince a few Congressmen that there was no wisdom in taxing us to death and I wasn't paying much attention to the stock market.My decision to sell out my line came suddenly,hence my friend's yarn.

I admit that I do get irresistible impulses at times to do certain things in the market.It doesn't matter whether I am long or short of stocks.I must get out.I am uncomfortable until I do.I myself think that what happens is that I see a lot of warning-signals.Perhaps not a single one may be sufficiently clear or powerful to afford me a positive,definite reason for doing what I suddenly feel like doing.Probably that is all there is to what they call“ticker-sense”that old traders say James R.Keene had so strongly developed and other operators before him.Usually,I confess,the warning turns out to be not only sound but timed to the minute.But in this particular instance there was no hunch.The black cat had nothing to do with it.What he tells everybody about my getting up so grumpy that morning I suppose can be explained—if I in truth was grouchy—by my disappointment.I knew I was not convincing the Congressman I talked to and the Committee did not view the problem of taxing Wall Street as I did.I wasn't trying to arrest or evade taxation on stock transactions but to suggest a tax that I as an experienced stock operator felt was neither unfair nor unintelligent.I didn't want Uncle Sam to kill the goose that could lay so many golden eggs with fair treatment.Possibly my lack of success not only irritated me but made me pessimistic over the future of an unfairly taxed business.But I'll tell you exactly what happened.

At the beginning of the bull market I thought well of the outlook in both the Steel trade and the copper market and I therefore felt bullish on stocks of both groups.So I started to accumulate some of them.I began by buying 5000 shares of Utah Copper and stopped because it didn't act right.That is,it did not behave as it should have behaved to make me feel I was wise in buying it.I think the price was around 114.I also started to buy United States Steel at almost the same price.I bought in all 20,000 shares the first day because it did act right.I followed the method I have described before.

Steel continued to act right and I therefore continued to accumulate it until I was carrying 72,000 shares of it in all.But my holdings of Utah Copper consisted of my initial purchase.I never got above the 5000 shares.Its behaviour did not encourage me to do more with it.

Everybody knows what happened.We had a big bull movement.I knew the market was going up.General conditions were favourable.Even after stocks had gone up extensively and my paper-profit was not to be sneezed at,the tape kept trumpeting:Not yet!Not yet!When I arrived in Washington the tape was still saying that to me.Of course,I had no intention of increasing my line at that late day,even though I was still bullish.At the same time,the market was plainly going my way and there was no occasion for me to sit in front of a quotation board all day,in hourly expectation of getting a tip to get out.Before the clarion call to retreat came—barring an utterly unexpected catastrophe,of course—the market would hesitate or otherwise prepare me for a reversal of the speculative situation.That was the reason why I went blithely about my business with my Congressmen.

At the same time,prices kept going up and that meant that the end of the bull market was drawing nearer.I did not look for the end on any fixed date.That was something quite beyond my power to determine.But I needn't tell you that I was on the watch for the tip-off.I always am,anyhow.It has become a matter of business habit with me.

I cannot swear to it but I rather suspect that the day before I sold out,seeing the high prices made me think of the magnitude of my paper-profit as well as of the line I was carrying and,later on,of my vain efforts to induce our legislators to deal fairly and intelligently by Wall Street.That was probably the way and the time the seed was sown within me.The subconscious mind worked on it all night.In the morning I thought of the market and began to wonder how it would act that day.When I went down to the office I saw not so much that prices were still higher and that I had a satisfying profit but that there was a great big market with a tremendous power of absorption.I could sell any amount of stock in that market;and,of course,when a man is carrying his full line of stocks,he must be on the watch for an opportunity to change his paper profit into actual cash.He should try to lose as little of the profit as possible in the swapping.Experience has taught me that a man can always find an opportunity to make his profits real and that this opportunity usually comes at the end of the move.That isn't tape-reading or a hunch.

Of course,when I found that morning a market in which I could sell out all my stocks without any trouble I did so.When you are selling out it is no wiser or braver to sell fifty shares than fifty thousand;but fifty shares you can sell in the dullest market without breaking the price and fifty thousand shares of a single stock is a different proposition.I had seventy-two thousand shares of U.S.Steel.This may not seem a colossal line,but you can't always sell that much without losing some of that profit that looks so nice on paper when you figure it out and that hurts as much to lose as if you actually had it safe in bank.

I had a total profit of about $1,500,000 and I grabbed it while the grabbing was good.But that wasn't the principal reason for thinking that I did the right thing in selling out when I did.The market proved it for me and that was indeed a source of satisfaction to me.It was this way:I succeeded in selling my entire line of seventy-two thousand shares of U.S.Steel at a price which averaged me just one point from the top of the day and of the movement.It proved that I was right,to the minute.But when,on the very same hour of the very same day I came to sell my 5000 Utah Copper,the price broke five points.Please recall that I began buying both stocks at the same time and that I acted wisely in increasing my line of U.S.Steel from twenty thousand shares to seventy-two thousand,and equally wisely in not increasing my line of Utah from the original 5000 shares.The reason why I didn't sell out my Utah Copper before was that I was bullish on the copper trade and it was a bull market in stocks and I didn't think that Utah would hurt me much even if I didn't make a killing in it.But as for hunches,there weren't any.

The training of a stock trader is like a medical education.The physician has to spend long years learning anatomy,physiology,materia medica and collateral subjects by the dozen.He learns the theory and then proceeds to devote his life to the practice.He observes and classifies all sorts of pathological phenomena.He learns to diagnose.If his diagnosis is correct—and that depends upon the accuracy of his observation—he ought to do pretty well in his prognosis,always keeping in mind,of course,that human fallibility and the utterly unforeseen will keep him from scoring 100 per cent of bull's-eyes.And then,as he gains in experience,he learns not only to do the right thing but to do it instantly,so that many people will think he does it instinctively.It really isn't automatism.It is that he has diagnosed the case according to his observations of such cases during a period of many years;and,naturally,after he has diagnosed it,he can only treat it in the way that experience has taught him is the proper treatment.You can transmit knowledge—that is,your particular collection of card-indexed facts—but not your experience.A man may know what to do and lose money—if he doesn't do it quickly enough.

Observation,experience,memory and mathematics—these are what the successful trader must depend on.He must not only observe accurately but remember at all times what he has observed.He cannot bet on the unreasonable or on the unexpected,however strong his personal convictions may be about man's unreasonableness or however certain he may feel that the unexpected happens very frequently.He must bet always on probabilities—that is,try to anticipate them.Years of practice at the game,of constant study,of always remembering,enable the trader to act on the instant when the unexpected happens as well as when the expected comes to pass.

A man can have great mathematical ability and an unusual power of accurate observation and yet fail in speculation unless he also possesses the experience and the memory.And then,like the physician who keeps up with the advances of science,the wise trader never ceases to study general conditions,to keep track of developments everywhere that are likely to affect or influence the course of the various markets.After years at the game it becomes a habit to keep posted.He acts almost automatically.He acquires the invaluable professional attitude and that enables him to beat the game—at times!This difference between the professional and the amateur or occasional trader cannot be overemphasised.I find,for instance,that memory and mathematics help me very much.Wall Street makes its money on a mathematical basis.I mean,it makes its money by dealing with facts and figures.

When I said that a trader has to keep posted to the minute and that he must take a purely professional attitude toward all markets and all developments,I merely meant to emphasise again that hunches and the mysterious ticker-sense haven't so very much to do with success.Of course,it often happens that an experienced trader acts so quickly that he hasn't time to give all his reasons in advance—but nevertheless they are good and sufficient reasons,because they are based on facts collected by him in his years of working and thinking and seeing things from the angle of the professional,to whom everything that comes to his mill is grist.Let me illustrate what I mean by the professional attitude.

I keep track of the commodities markets,always.It is a habit of years.As you know,the Government reports indicated a winter wheat crop about the same as last year and a bigger spring wheat crop than in 1921.The condition was much better and we probably would have an earlier harvest than usual.When I got the figures of condition and I saw what we might expect in the way of yield—mathematics—I also thought at once of the coal miners' strike and the railroad shopmen's strike.I couldn't help thinking of them because my mind always thinks of all developments that have a bearing on the markets.It instantly struck me that the strike which had already affected the movement of freight everywhere must affect wheat prices adversely.I figured this way:There was bound to be considerable delay in moving winter wheat to market by reason of the strike-crippled transportation facilities,and by the time those improved the Spring wheat crop would be ready to move.That meant that when the railroads were able to move wheat in quantity they would be bringing in both crops together—the delayed winter and the early spring wheat—and that would mean a vast quantity of wheat pouring into the market at one fell swoop.Such being the facts of the case—the obvious probabilities—the traders,who would know and figure as I did,would not bull wheat for a while.They would not feel like buying it unless the price declined to such figures as made the purchase of wheat a good investment.With no buying power in the market,the price ought to go down.Thinking the way I did I must find whether I was right or not.As old Pat Hearne used to remark,“You can't tell till you bet.”Between being bearish and selling there is no need to waste time.

Experience has taught me that the way a market behaves is an excellent guide for an operator to follow.It is like taking a patient's temperature and pulse or noting the colour of the eyeballs and the coating of the tongue.

Now,ordinarily a man ought to be able to buy or sell a million bushels of wheat within a range of ? cent.On this day when I sold the 250,000 bushels to test the market for timeliness,the price went down ? cent.Then,since the reaction did not definitely tell me all I wished to know,I sold another quarter of a million bushels.I noticed that it was taken in driblets;that is,the buying was in lots of 10,000 or 15,000 bushels instead of being taken in two or three transactions which would have been the normal way.In addition to the homeopathic buying the price went down 1? cents on my selling.Now,I need not waste time pointing out that the way in which the market took my wheat and the disproportionate decline on my selling told me that there was no buying power there.Such being the case,what was the only thing to do?Of course,to sell a lot more.Following the dictates of experience may possibly fool you,now and then.But not following them invariably makes an ass of you.So I sold 2,000,000 bushels and the price went down some more.A few days later the market's behaviour practically compelled me to sell an additional 2,000,000 bushels and the price declined further still;a few days later wheat started to break badly and slumped off 6 cents a bushel.And it didn't stop there.It has been going down,with short-lived rallies.

Now,I didn't follow a hunch.Nobody gave me a tip.It was my habitual or professional mental attitude toward the commodities markets that gave me the profit and that attitude came from my years at this business.I study because my business is to trade.The moment the tape told me that I was on the right track my business duty was to increase my line.I did.That is all there is to it.

I have found that experience is apt to be steady dividend payer in this game and that observation gives you the best tips of all.The behaviour of a certain stock is all you need at times.You observe it.Then experience shows you how to profit by variations from the usual,that is,from the probable.For example,we know that all stocks do not move one way together but that all the stocks of a group will move up in a bull market and down in a bear market.This is a commonplace of speculation.It is the commonest of all self-given tips and the commission houses are well aware of it and pass it on to any customer who has not thought of it himself;I mean,the advice to trade in those stocks which have lagged behind other stocks of the same group.Thus,if U.S.Steel goes up,it is logically assumed that it is only a matter of time when Crucible or Republic or Bethlehem will follow suit.Trade conditions and prospects should work alike with all stocks of a group and the prosperity should be shared by all.On the theory,corroborated by experience times without number,that every dog has his day in the market,the public will buy A.B.Steel because it has not advanced while C.D.Steel and X.Y.Steel have gone up.

I never buy a stock even in a bull market,if it doesn't act as it ought to act in that kind of market.I have sometimes bought a stock during an undoubted bull market and found out that other stocks in the same group were not acting bullishly and I have sold out my stock.Why?Experience tells me that it is not wise to buck against what I may call the manifest group-tendency.I cannot expect to play certainties only.I must reckon on probabilities—and anticipate them.An old broker once said to me:“If I am walking along a railroad track and I see a train coming toward me at sixty miles an hour,do I keep on walking on the ties?Friend,I side-step.And I do not even pat myself on the back for being so wise and prudent.”

Last year,after the general bull movement was well under way,I noticed that one stock in a certain group was not going with the rest of the group,though the group with that one exception was going with the rest of the market.I was long a very fair amount of Blackwood Motors.Everybody knew that the company was doing a very big business.The price was rising from one to three points a day and the public was coming in more and more.This naturally centered attention on the group and all the various motor stocks began to go up.One of them,however,persistently held back and that was Chester.It lagged behind the others so that it was not long before it made people talk.The low price of Chester and its apathy was contrasted with the strength and activity in Blackwood and other motor stocks and the public logically enough listened to the touts and tipsters and wiseacres and began to buy Chester on the theory that it must presently move up with the rest of the group.

Instead of going up on this moderate public buying,Chester actually decline,Now,it would have been no job to put it up in that bull market,considering that Blackwood,a stock of the same group,was one of the sensational leaders of the general advance and we were hearing nothing but the wonderful improvement in the demand for automobiles of all kinds and the record output.

It was thus plain that the inside clique in Chester were not doing any of the things that inside cliques invariably do in a bull market.For this failure to do the usual thing there might be two reasons.Perhaps the insiders did not put it up because they wished to accumulate more stock before advancing the price.But this was an untenable theory if you analysed the volume and character of the trading in Chester.The other reason was that they did not put it up because they were afraid of getting stock if they tried to.

When the men who ought to want a stock don't want it,why should I want it?I figured that no matter how prosperous other automobile companies might be,it was a cinch to sell Chester short.Experiences had taught me to beware of buying a stock that refuses to follow the group-leader.

I easily established the fact that not only there was no inside buying but that there was actually inside selling.There were other symptomatic warnings against buying Chester,though all I required was its inconsistent market behaviour.It was again the tape that tipped me off and that was why I sold Chester short.One day,not very long afterward,the stock broke wide open.Later on we learned—officially,as it were—that insiders had indeed been selling it,knowing full well that the condition of the company was not good.The reason,as usual,was disclosed after the break.But the warning came before the break.I don't look out for the breaks;I look out for the warnings.I didn't know what was the trouble with Chester;neither did I follow a hunch.I merely knew that something must be wrong.

Only the other day we had what the newspapers called a sensational movement in Guiana Gold.After selling on the Curb at 50 or close to it,it was listed on the Stock Exchange.It started there at around 35,began to go down and finally broke 20.

Now,I'd never have called that break sensational because it was fully to be expected.If you had asked you could have learned the history of the company.No end of people knew it.It was told to me as follows:A syndicate was formed consisting of a half dozen extremely well-known capitalists and a prominent banking-house.One of the members was the head of the Belle Isle Exploration Company,which advanced Guiana over $10,000,000 cash and received in return bonds and 250,000 shares out of a total of one million shares of the Guiana Gold Mining Company.The stock went on a dividend basis and it was mighty well advertised.The Belle Isle people thought it well to cash in and they gave a call on their 250,000 shares to the bankers,who arranged to try to market that stock and some of their own holdings as well.They thought of entrusting the market manipulation to a professional whose fee was to be one third of the profits from the sale of the 250,000 shares above 36.I understand that the agreement was drawn up and ready to be signed but at the last moment the bankers decided to undertake the marketing themselves and save the fee.So they organized an inside pool.The bankers had a call on the Belle Isle holdings of 250,000 at 36.They put this in at 41.That is,insiders paid their own banking colleagues a 5-point profit to start with.I don't know whether they knew it or not.

It is perfectly plain that to the bankers the operation had every semblance of a cinch.We had run into a bull market and the stocks of the group to which Guiana Gold belonged were among the market leaders.The company was making big profits and paying regular dividends.This together with the high character of the sponsors made the public regard Guiana almost as an investment stock.I was told that about 400,000 shares were sold to the public all the way up to 47.

The gold group was very strong.But presently Guiana began to sag.It declined ten points.That was all right if the pool was marketing stock.But pretty soon the Street began to hear that things were not altogether satisfactory and the property was not bearing out the high expectations of the promoters.Then,of course,the reason for the decline became plain.But before the reason was known I had the warning and had taken steps to test the market for Guiana.The stock was acting pretty much as Chester Motors did.I sold Guiana.The price went down.I sold more.The price went still lower.The stock was repeating the performance of Chester and of a dozen other stocks whose clinical history I remembered.The tape plainly told me that there was something wrong—something that kept insiders from buying it—insiders who knew exactly why they should not buy their own stock in a bull market.On the other hand,outsiders,who did not know,were now buying because having sold at 45 and higher the stock looked cheap at 35 and lower.The dividend was still being paid.The stock was a bargain.

Then the news came.It reached me,as important market news often does,before it reached the public.But the confirmation of the reports of striking barren rock instead of rich ore merely gave me the reason for the earlier inside selling.I myself didn't sell on the news.I had sold long before,on the stock's behaviour.My concern with it was not philosophical.I am a trader and therefore looked for one sign:Inside buying.There wasn't any.I didn't have to know why the insiders did not think enough of their own stock to buy it on the decline.It was enough that their market plans plainly did not include further manipulation for the rise.That made it a cinch to sell the stock short.The public had bought almost a half million shares and the only change in ownership possible was from one set of ignorant outsiders who would sell in the hope of stopping losses to another set of ignorant outsiders who might buy in the hope of making money.

I am not telling you this to moralise on the public's losses through their buying of Guiana or on my profit through my selling of it,but to emphasise how important the study of group behaviourism is and how its lessons are disregarded by inadequately equipped traders,big and little.And it is not only in the stock market that the tape warns you.It blows the whistle quite as loudly in commodities.

I had an interesting experience in cotton.I was bearish on stocks and put out a moderate short line.At the same time I sold cotton short;50,000 bales.My stock deal proved profitable and I neglected my cotton.The first thing I knew I had a loss of $250,000 on my 50,000 bales.As I said,my stock deal was so interesting and I was doing so well in it that I did not wish to take my mind off it.Whenever I thought of cotton I just said to myself:“I'll wait for a reaction and cover.”The price would react a little but before I could decide to take my loss and cover the price would rally again,and go higher than ever.So I'd decide again to wait a little and I'd go back to my stock deal and confine my attention to that.Finally I closed out my stocks at a very handsome profit and went away to Hot Springs for a rest and a holiday.

That really was the first time that I had my mind free to deal with the problem of my losing deal in cotton.The trade had gone against me.There were times when it almost looked as if I might win out.I noticed that whenever anybody sold heavily there was a good reaction.But almost instantly the price would rally and make a new high for the move.

Finally,by the time I had been in Hot Springs a few days,I was a million to the bad and no let up in the rising tendency.I thought over all I had done and had not done and I said to myself:“I must be wrong!”With me to feel that I am wrong and to decide to get out are practically one process.So I covered,at a loss of about one million.

The next morning I was playing golf and not thinking of anything else.I had made my play in cotton.I had been wrong.I had paid for being wrong and the receipted bill was in my pocket.I had no more concern with the cotton market than I have at this moment.When I went back to the hotel for luncheon I stopped at the broker's office and took a look at the quotations.I saw that cotton had gone off 50 points.That wasn't anything.But I also noticed that it had not rallied as it had been in the habit of doing for weeks,as soon as the pressure of the particular selling that had depressed it eased up.This had indicated that the line of least resistance was upward and it had cost me a million to shut my eyes to it.

Now,however,the reason that had made me cover at a big loss was no longer a good reason since there had not been the usual prompt and vigorous rally.So I sold 10,000 bales and waited.Pretty soon the market went off 50 points.I waited a little while longer.There was no rally.I had got pretty hungry by now,so I went into the dining-room and ordered my luncheon.Before the waiter could serve it,I jumped up,went to the broker's office,I saw that there had been no rally and so I sold 10,000 bales more.I waited a little and had the pleasure of seeing the price decline 40 points more.That showed me I was trading correctly so I returned to the dining-room,ate my luncheon and went back to the broker's.There was no rally in cotton that day.That very night I left Hot Springs.

It was all very well to play golf but I had been wrong in cotton in selling when I did and in covering when I did.So I simply had to get back on the job and be where I could trade in comfort.The way the market took my first ten thousand bales made me sell the second ten thousand,and the way the market took the second made me certain the turn had come.It was the difference in behaviour.

Well,I reached Washington and went to my brokers' office there,which was in charge of my old friend Tucker.While I was there the market went down some more.I was more confident of being right now than I had been of being wrong before.So I sold 40,000 bales and the market went off 75 points.It showed that there was no support there.That night the market closed still lower.The old buying power was plainly gone.There was no telling at what level that power would again develop,but I felt confident of the wisdom of my position.The next morning I left Washington for New York by motor.There was no need to hurry.

When we got to Philadelphia I drove to a broker's office.I saw that there was the very dickens to pay in the cotton market.Prices had broken badly and there was a small-sized panic on.I didn't wait to get to New York.I called up my brokers on the long distance and I covered my shorts.As soon as I got my reports and found that I had practically made up my previous loss,I motored on to New York without having to stop en route to see any more quotations.

Some friends who were with me in Hot Springs talk to this day of the way I jumped up from the luncheon table to sell that second lot of 10,000 bales.But again that clearly was not a hunch.It was an impulse that came from the conviction that the time to sell cotton had now come,however great my previous mistake had been.I had to take advantage of it.It was my chance.The subconscious mind probably went on working,reaching conclusions for me.The decision to sell in Washington was the result of my observation.My years of experience in trading told me that the line of least resistance had changed from up to down.

I bore the cotton market no grudge for taking a million dollars out of me and I did not hate myself for making a mistake of that calibre any more than I felt proud for covering in Philadelphia and making up my loss.My trading mind concerns itself with trading problems and I think I am justified in asserting that I made up my first loss because I had the experience and the memory.

我有一位好朋友,他最喜欢对别人说,他觉得我有种灵验的第六感。他说这个第六感可以在不用分析的情况,就知道该如何去做,我只要随意地听从那些神秘力量的驱使,就能够恰逢其时地从股市中抽身出来。他在早餐桌上最扬扬自得的言论与一只猫有关。他说那只猫告诉我,卖掉手里那些股票。我听了猫传达的消息后,心情沮丧,焦躁不安,直到我卖掉了牛市时期买来的所有股票,才安静了下来。如此,我才能在股价最高的时候卖掉,也就自然而然地证明了那位固执朋友的第六感理论。

我那时候在华盛顿,试图努力说服几个议员,让他们明白对我们大量收税是错误的,当时我并没有在股市上花费多少心力。我突然卖掉了手里的股票,才让朋友那奇怪的说法越发成真了似的。

我承认,确实在某些时候会出现一种难以控制的愿望,想在股市上有所动作。而这与我做多或放空股票没有什么关系。我一定要从市场中跳出来才会感到安心。我个人觉得,这次卖掉手中的股票,是因为我看到了很多警示性的小现象。或许,并没有一个很清晰的能给我一个明确答案的有力的指示信号,刺激我去做突然要做的事情。更可能的是,这就是人们嘴里经常所说的那种“炒股灵感”。老投机分子说,詹姆斯·凯恩和他之前的很多前辈曾经确实把自己身上的那种炒股灵感培养得很出色。我承认,这样的警示最后不但会被证明是非常健全的警告,而且时机能够掌握得一丝不差。不过在刚才这个特例中,没什么第六感存在,也与一只黑猫没什么关系。朋友对谁都说我起床后非常焦躁不安,我想如果我真的坐立不安的话,原因是我很失望。我知道我没有说服与我见面的国会议员,委员会对于课征股市税赋的问题,看法和我不同。我不是要阻止或者逃脱股市上的税收,只是按照一个经验丰富的老炒股手所想的,提出公平又明理的税收方式,我想让政府不要急着杀害在公平层面上能够生出金蛋的鹅。或许是我没有成功劝告他,从而让自己很烦躁,也让我对这个受到不公平税收的业务深感悲观。但是,我会告诉你到底发生了什么事情。

在这一次牛市开始时,我对钢铁和铜的股市行情非常看好,觉得应该做多头。所以我下手积攒股票,一开始买了5000股犹他州铜矿公司的股票,后来又停了下来,感觉股市行情波动不太对。意思是,这只股票变现出来的行情状况,与我对它的感觉不符,买进并不是聪明的做法。我想我是按照114美元的价格买进的。同时,我也按照基本差不多的价格,买了美国钢铁公司的股票,它的情况比较明朗,头天我就按照我以前的那种方式,买了2万股。

钢铁股市持续对路,所以我也一直在买进,直到手里积攒了7.2万股才罢手。但是我手里的犹他州铜矿公司的股票还是一开始买进的那些,一直没有多于5000股。它的行情不好,我没有多买一些的理由。

所有人都很清楚行情,我们处于牛市。我知道股价要上涨,整体来说前景很好。就在股价整体上涨活跃,同时我的账面利润非常可观的时候,行情记录还表现出“还不到时候啊,还不到时候”的状态。我在华盛顿时,行情还是这样的表现。不过,就在那天晚一些的时候,我还能去做多头,可我不想再买进增加头寸了。这期间,股市的前进方向显然跟我的想法一致,我都不必成日坐在行情记录牌跟前,期待着遇到个什么情况然后卖出股票。在退守的号角吹起之前,除非忽然出现所料不及的大事情,不然股市就会停滞不前,或者以其他的方式,让我做好准备,应付突然反转的投机情势。我能轻松愉快地跟议员们讨论事情,就是鉴于这个原因。

同时,股价持续在涨高,这说明多头市场正在走向结束。我不能确定到底什么时候结束,这是我没办法做到的事情。但我不需要对你讲,你就会明白,我一直对此非常留意。无论如何,现在我还是老样子,我做事的习惯已经养成了。

我不能保证,但我非常怀疑,在我抛出所有股票的前一天,还是有些警示的。我看到股市在高位上滞留,于是就考虑到了我手里的股票数量和利润,这确实不是个小数目。后来,我想到我白花了精力去试图影响立法者们,希望他们对华尔街上的股票交易纳税更明智公平一些,可能那时候就这样在我心中埋下了种子。我一晚上都处在这样下意识的状态中。早上,我想起股市,也不清楚它会怎样发展。到了交易大厅,我看到的不是上涨的价格,而是我能得到的不菲的利润和吸收力非常强悍的市场。面对这样的市场,我能够卖掉任意多的股票。当然,一个人手持数量庞大的股票就得随时注意买卖的机会,好把账面上的利润换成正儿八经的现金。在买卖过程中,要尽量不让利润减少。我的经验是,一个人总是不缺乏让利润变现的机会,而且机会总是出现在股市行情走向快要结束的时候。这可不是什么研究行情记录的能力,或者对股市走向的第六感。

那天早上,当市场出现一个让我不费吹灰之力就能卖出股票的时机时,我及时出手了。你在出清持投的时候,卖掉50股和5万股一样需要聪明勇敢,可是在市场不景气的时候,卖掉50股不会致使股价下滑,但卖出5万股就不一样了。我手里有美国钢铁公司的7.2万股,这不算什么大数量的持股,不过也不能卖掉这么多还不会使账面上看起来能获得的那些利润遭受损失,这种损失会与你银行里存着的钱一样,亏损了会让你一样心痛。

我的利润大概有150万美元,股市行情好的时候,我拥有这些利润,可这不能成为我觉得卖掉对了的理由。市场会为我证明对不对,这一点我也确实很满意。是这样的:我把手中美国钢铁公司的7.2万股全部卖掉了,卖出的平均价格恰好比这天股市行情的最高价低了不到1个点。这就说明我做得非常符合时机。但是就在当天的同一小时里,我卖掉5000股犹他州铜矿公司股票时价格跌了5个点。你想啊,我可是同时买进的这两只股票啊。我非常聪明地把美国钢铁公司的股票从2万股增持到了7.2万股,同样我也聪明地没有增持犹他州铜矿的股票。我之前之所以没有卖掉犹他州铜矿的股票,是因为我看好铜矿业,而市场也是多头市场,就算我用它赚不到钱,也不会因为它而赔掉多少。这里面确实没有灵感之说。

股民们在炒股中受到的训练就像医学教育一般。医生们必须要花费很长时间去学习解剖、生理、药物和另外很多的课程。他们学会这些理论后,开始终生行医。他们对各种疾病引发的病情察言观色后进行分类,学会诊断病情。一旦靠着精确的观察诊断对了,接下来就该更好地防治了。不过要牢牢记住,人是没办法不犯错的,同时还会遇到各种突发性事件的影响,使得诊断不可能百分百正确。其后,他们会逐渐积累更丰富的经验,不但知道怎样做正确的事情,而且会在片刻之间这样做,因此很多人认为医生靠直觉行事。而这真的不是反射动作,而是他通过很多年以来对病人情况的熟悉而逐步学会的。而且当病情得以诊断后,他是利用经验告诉他的正确治疗疾病的方法去进行后续工作的。人们能够学习到知识,比如你可以专门用卡片索引来传播你搜集到的知识点,可是经验这种东西就没办法传承。人们可能会明白该干什么,但是如果速度赶不上,还是要赔本的。

一个成功的股票交易者,靠的就是观察、经验、记忆、数学。他既需要准确地观察,也需要牢记自己观察到的结果。他不能在没有依据的事情或者意料之外的情况下去赌。无论他自己多么坚信没有依据的东西,也不管人们对预料之外的情况多么看好,他都要把宝押在可能性上,也就是说他要预测这些可能。在这样的投资游戏里,那些长年累月的行动、连续不断的研究、牢不可破的记忆,能够让人在可以或不能预料的情况发生的时候,都能够及时采取应对措施。

人能够具备很强的数学能力和对事物进行精确观察的能力,可如果他没有多少经验和记忆的储备,仍然会失败。而且,睿智的商人也要像随着科学进展而进步的医生那样,不停地研究整个大势,追踪各种可能对市场走向起到影响作用的发展情况。在这里面打拼几年后,他会养成保持信息灵通的好习惯,他差不多要能够自发地行动起来。他要修炼成珍贵的专业态度,这一点能够让他在行业内不断地成功。专业的炒股手和业余的炒股手,以及偶然玩一次的人之间有很大区别,强调这个差别也不是过分的事。比如我就发现数学和记忆对我帮助很大。数学是华尔街交易商赚钱的基本功,我是说,华尔街就是靠处理数字和事实来赚钱的。

身为交易商,就要时刻保持消息灵通,用纯粹的专业态度来看待整个市场和股市的走向。我只想再次强调:灵感和神秘的看盘能力与最终的成功没有半点儿关系。不过,这样的事情经常出现,经验丰富的交易商反应迅速,以至于没有多余的时间说明所有判断来由,可这些来由是很值得借鉴的,是建立在事实基础上的,而这些事实是他靠着多年的经验,在所有的工作当中,通过观察与思考收集来的,他把每件事情都盘算得清清楚楚。现在,我来说一下,我所指的专业态度是什么意思。

我一直关注着期货市场的动向,这是多年养成的习惯。就像你知道的那样,从政府的各类报道中可以分析出,今年冬小麦的种植量与去年持平,春小麦的种植量比1921年要大。种植情势好很多,我们可能会更早些得到收获。我了解了大致的情形,用数字预算了产量后,马上想到了煤铁工人的罢工。我一直在想着与市场相关的所有因素,所以也就不自觉地想到了这个。我觉得对各地的货物运输已经造成了影响的罢工事件,必定会波及小麦价格。我觉得,罢工引发了交通障碍,冬小麦的运输会被拖延,等到运输状态好点儿以后,春小麦就到了准备运输的时候。这就是说,铁路能够大量运输小麦时,一定会把延后运到市场的冬小麦和提早收成的春小麦一起运来。这意味着小麦会大量进入市场。这是非常明显的事实,那些跟我一样善于观察的交易商肯定不想在这段时间买进小麦。只有当小麦价格跌得差不多,购买能够产生很好的利润,他们才会买。市场没人买,麦价就会跌。这样考虑之后,我必须要搞清自己对不对。就像凯恩说的那句话:“在你赚到钱之前,什么都难说。”市场不景气了,就要及时地卖出,不能浪费时间。

我的经验是,交易商最好的指路牌就是市场的运动方式,正如医生为病人望闻问切一样。

正常的时候,一个人应该能在价格差距在1/4美分的范围内,买卖100万蒲式耳的小麦。那天,我卖了25万蒲式耳小麦去检验市场,了解操作时机,结果价格跌了1/4美分。那时候,这个情况对我来说不够明确,我就又卖了25万蒲式耳。我发现每次都是被人分批少量买走的。这就是说,买盘是由1万或5000蒲式耳的很多单子凑成,而不像以往那样两三笔就买完。除了这样零散的买卖外,由于我的卖出,价格下跌了1又1/4美分。此时我必须要说,市场吸纳小麦与小麦价格下跌是不对等的,这说明市场已没了购买力。这就是真实情况,那怎么办?那就再往外卖。按照经验行事,可能偶尔会让你出错,但不按照经验行事,就是个笨蛋。所以我卖掉了200万蒲式耳小麦,价格下跌更快了。几天后,市场迫使我又卖了200万,价格继续下降。又过了几天,小麦价格开始暴跌,每蒲式耳下跌6美分后还在跌。有时有点儿回稳,可只是一瞬,然后又会下跌。

我在此时没有遵照第六感行事,也没人对我讲什么内幕消息,而是我专业的市场观察力帮我实现了盈利。这也是我多年经商总结的经验。我做的是投资,就要深入研究。行情表明我的想法没错,我需要做的就是加大投入。我就是这么做的,事情也是这么发展的。

在这样的交易里,经验是可以带来稳定效益的,而要得到最好的市场信息就需要观察。你想弄清楚某只股票行情,就要一直观察。然后经验会告诉你,如何从跟平常不同的变化中获利,也就是说从可能性中获利。比如,我们知道股票的波动方式并不单一,可所有股票在多头时上涨,在空头时下跌,这却是很普遍的。这也是自发性的内幕消息里最常见的一个,股票交易所很清楚这点,它向所有不深思这个问题的股民传达这一信息。我的意思是,它总建议股民们买卖同一类股票里低迷的那个。所以,按照逻辑判断,若美国钢铁公司的股票上涨,其他几家钢铁公司也会跟着涨,只是时间先后的问题。交易状况和前景对同类股票中的所有股票都一样,市场带来的好处是惠及所有股票的。按照理论,哪只股票都有情况好的时候,这一点已经被市场验证过了。股民们会买这家没有上涨的钢铁股票,是因为另外两家钢铁股票都已经涨价了。

就算在多头市场,若哪只股票的发展与市场不相符,我就不会买。有时候,我在完全可以肯定的多头市场时买一只股票,可同时看到这类股票的其他股票没有涨高,我就会卖掉这只股票。原因何在?经验告诉我,与那种被我叫作明显类股倾向相违背是不明智的。我不能光靠能确定的东西,也要想到各种可能并且做出预估。有个老前辈曾对我说过:“如果我沿着一条铁轨走路,看见火车以100公里每小时的速度朝我驶来,我还要继续前行吗?朋友,我要躲到一边。我甚至不会因此而夸奖自己。”

去年,在多头市场里,我注意到在某一个类股中,有个股票与同类的其他股票走向不相符,可是这类股票中除了它以外,其他的都跟着整体股市在上涨。我买了很多布莱克·伍德汽车公司的股票。很多人都知道,这个公司发展繁荣,每天的涨幅都在1到3个点,股民们买得越来越多了。这只股票颇受关注,其他汽车公司的股票也跟着上涨。可是,切斯特汽车的股票却很落后,所以没多久人们就议论纷纷。他们拿切斯特的低股价与其他汽车股票的活跃上涨进行比较,也自然会向那些喜欢涉足内幕消息的人或者自以为明智的人打听,然后开始买进切斯特股票,他们觉得它会跟其他汽车股票一样上涨。

股民们买了切斯特的股票,但它并没上涨,而且还下跌了。其实在这样的多头市场中,要拉抬这只股票的价格毫无困难。想想看,在汽车股票中,布莱克·伍德是上涨最厉害的股票之一。而且,我们听到的全是人们对各式汽车需求量增加的消息,全是产量创纪录的新闻。

事情很清楚,切斯特公司内线集团在当时股市上涨时没有做应该做的事情——拉抬股价。这本是正常情况下该做的,没做的原因可能有两个,一个可能是他们想在上涨前多积攒些股票,所以没有力推,可假如你分析一下它的交易量和情势,就会知道这是个很白痴的理由。另一个可能是他们担心拉抬股价会吸进股票。

那些本来需要股票的人却不想要,那我为什么还要呢?我觉得,不管其他汽车公司的股票多么景气,卖掉切斯特总是很必然的事,因为我的经验就是要防范那些跟同类不相符的股票。

我非常容易地证实,切斯特公司没有内部买进,而且相反还有内部的人在卖出。另外也有警告我不要买切斯特股票的其他讯息,不过我只需要知道它与市场不相符的消息,这个是市场行情记录告诉我的,也是我卖掉它的原因。几天后,切斯特股票暴跌。后来我从官方渠道听说,因为公司内部人员知道情况不好,一直在卖股票。跟以往一样,股价下跌后,原因才会人尽皆知。可是,在股价下跌前就有迹象表明了的。我不注重下跌本身,只看各种前期征兆,我不清楚切斯特到底怎么回事,也没跟着感觉走,只是知道其中一定有不对劲的地方。

几天前,我看到报纸说,圭亚那金矿公司股票变动很厉害,在场外按照50美元左右交易,然后在证券交易所挂牌上市。刚刚挂牌时的交易价格大概是35美元,然后就开始下跌,一直下跌到了20美元以下。

我不会认为这样的下跌耸人听闻,因为本就是意料之中的事情,如果有质疑,可以去查看这家公司的发展史,不知道有多少人清楚这件事。人们这么对我说了其中的情形:这家公司组成了一个炒作集团,成员由六个著名的资本家和一家实力派银行共同组成,有个成员是贝尔岛勘探公司的老板,这家公司向圭亚那公司贷了1000多万美元的款,作为交易就得到了四分之一的股份和一些其他合约。这只股票配股后上市,也经过了大力宣传。贝尔岛勘探公司想兑现手中的股票,所以邀请银行家来探讨他们拥有的那四分之一的股份,也就是25万股。银行家采取措施卖出了这些股票,同时还卖了手中的其他股票。他们想委托一个专业人士去做这件事,回报就是把25万股按照比36美元高的价格卖掉后,得到其中三分之一的利润。我清楚,这个协议确定后在签字时,银行家却决定要自己来做,从而节省需要付出的酬劳。所以他们内部指派了个团队。他们要求那25万股按照36美元从贝尔岛勘探公司手中成交,再以41美元上市。也就是说,他们给自己的银行同伙们支付了5美元的利润,然后才开始放入市场去操作。我不知道他们是不是清楚这一点。

对这家银行来说,情形很明显,这次销售作业从各方面看来都是十拿九稳。市场成了多头,圭亚那公司旗下的这类股票在股市上处于前端地位,他们获得了很大的利润,支付了股息。这一情形再加上主办银行的名声很好,股民们觉得圭亚那金矿公司的股票完全适合去投资。我听说大概有40万股涨到了47美元后被出售给大众。

黄金股票的股价上涨形势很不错,可是没多久圭亚那就又下跌了10个点。假若当时公司内部还在继续行销这只股票这也没什么关系。可是,华尔街上不久就收到消息说,情形不是很好,公司的资产不足以支持承销商的高度期望。后来,股价下跌的原因也明了了,可在此之前,我就获得了警示,同时做了应对。这只股票与切斯特汽车股票的情况一样,所以我卖掉了圭亚那公司的股票。价格下跌的时候,我又继续卖,价格愈低。它与切斯特以及我所知的其他十几种有相似情况的股票出现了同样的结果。从行情记录上能明显知悉,公司内部不买股票,他们也明白自己不在多头市场买自家股票的原因。另外来说,不清楚内幕的股民们却在买进,他们觉得这只股票的价格曾上涨到45美元以上,现在按35美元及以下的价格购买就很值,一定会有钱可赚。公司继续配发股利。这只股票现在是便宜货。

接着消息就传出了。像以往重要的市场消息常见的情形类似,当人们知道详情之前,我就已经知道消息了。但是,证实这家公司并没有得到富有的金矿,得到的只是一堆不值钱的乱石的报道,只是让我明白了公司内部为什么很早就卖出股票的原因。我自己不是听到消息才卖出的,在这之前很早我就靠着行情把它卖掉了。我关心的事情与哲学没什么关系,我自己就是个股民,我只寻觅内部买盘的迹象,可这个迹象没出现。我不用知道公司内部在股价下跌时不买的原因,只需要清楚他们的计划中不包含拉高股价就行了。这就能使放空这只股票变得十拿九稳。股民们购买了大概500万股,股票所有权只是让股票从一群期盼止损而卖掉股票的笨蛋手中,转到了一群妄图大赚所以买了股票的笨蛋手中。

我说这些不是对大家买了圭亚那的股票因此赔本和我卖掉这只股票后获利而进行指手画脚,而是想说明对类股进行行情研究是很重要的事情,也想强调大大小小、能力不足的交易者如何忽视这种教训。行情记录的警示不光出现在股市中,在期货市场上也会出现。

在做棉花期货的时候,我经历了一个很有意思的事情。那时候我在股市上做的是空头,在慢慢往外卖,而且赚了钱。同时我也放空了5万包棉花,可是却没怎么重视。后来,我知道棉花期货的首个消息就是赔了25万。我说了,我的股票操作很有意思,而且我的表现也不错,所以我不想分心。关于棉花期货,我是这么想的:“我要等到回调时再平仓。”棉花价格会略微回调,但是在我决定认赔回补的时候,价格反弹了,随后又上涨得更加厉害。所以我就想再等等看吧,又回头操作股票,花心思去交易。最终我结束股票操作,赚了一大笔钱后,就去哈特温泉休假了。

这是我首次真正闲下来,把心思放在处理棉花期货亏损的问题上。这笔交易对我不利,有很多次甚至到了我马上就能赚到钱的程度。我注意到每次有人大量卖出,棉花价格就会适度回调。但是几乎立刻就反弹,并且创下新高价。

我在温泉度假的这几天,已经亏损了100万,棉花价格还在上涨。我细想我做的事情以及我没做的事情,然后对自己说:“我肯定哪里搞错了。”于是,我就立马决定从棉花期货中撤出来。所以我才平了仓,损失大约100万。

第二天,我心无旁骛地打高尔夫球。在棉花期货上我做错了,也付出了代价,这笔代价的收据就在我的衣袋中装着。我当时和此刻一样,对棉花市场毫不关心。吃午饭的时候,我去交易所看了看期货行情,棉花已经下跌了50点,而这并不能说明什么。关键是,我还看到它的价格跟之前几周有些异样,只要那种特意卖出而打压价格的形势稍微减轻些,价格就会反弹,过去这种情形说明最小阻力价格在上升,而我却视而不见,所以赔了100万。

致使我平仓蒙受了很大损失的原因已经不值得一提,因为那种通常意义上的激烈反弹已经不会有了。所以,我卖掉了1万包棉花,然后蛰伏待机。没多长时间,价格就下跌了50点。我又等了等,价格还是没有反弹,我饥饿难耐,只好去餐厅吃饭。点餐后在等服务员上菜的时候,我猛然一惊,赶紧跑回交易所,看到价格还是没有反弹,所以又卖了1万包。过了一会儿,棉花又下跌了40美分,这让我很开心,说明我的做法没错。我又到餐厅吃了午饭,然后回到经纪人办公室。那天,棉花价格一直没有反弹,晚上我就离开了哈特温泉。

打高尔夫球自然让人高兴,但我卖出棉花和回补棉花的举动都是错误的,所以我必须要回到更适合交易的地方开始忙活了。我第一次卖掉棉花,市场反响不错,这就又使我第二次往外抛了1万包,我从市场吸纳棉花的反应中知道,反转已经到来。这一点在不同的市场行为中都表现出来了。

我到华盛顿后,去了我一位老朋友负责的交易公司。到了那里,行情又下跌了。此时我更能确定,之前做得绝对正确。所以,我接着卖掉了4万包,市场价格跌了75点,这说明在这个价位上市场没法支撑得住。那晚到了收盘的时候,价格还是非常低,原本强劲的买盘力量已经消失了。也不知道棉花期货市场会在什么价位才能再次活跃起来,不过我对自己的明智做法信心十足。次日早上,我坐汽车从华盛顿回到了纽约,不用再那么匆匆忙忙了。

到费城时,我开车去了一家交易公司。我了解了棉花期货市场连一点儿支撑力都没有,价格跌得很严重,出现了一种小型恐慌。我也等不及到纽约了,就给经纪人打了个长途电话,让他替我回补空头头寸。当我接到回报单后,看到我其实已经将前一次赔掉的钱补回来了。我继续上路回纽约,再也没半道上停下车去查看行情。

与我一起在哈特温泉度假的朋友们,后来谈到了那天我在准备吃午餐的时候,忽然一惊跑回交易厅去再次卖掉1万包棉花的事情。显然,这不是什么第六感,而是源于对自己判断力的信任所做出的事。我坚信无论之前怎么出错,现在是到了卖出的时候了。我必须要抓住机会,这是我该利用的机会,下意识中的考量一直没停歇,最终有了良好的结果。在华盛顿的抛售,是我对市场考量的结果。这么多年的经验说明,这次最小阻力线的走向已经从上涨变成下跌。

对于在棉花期货中损失100万的事情,我毫无怨言。我没有因为出现了很大失误而自责,也没有因为在费城弥补回来了损失而得意。我的交易心理只关心交易问题,我觉得自己有理由宣称,我有丰富的经验和牢靠的记忆,因此能够补回一开始赔了的资金。

用户搜索

疯狂英语 英语语法 新概念英语 走遍美国 四级听力 英语音标 英语入门 发音 美语 四级 新东方 七年级 赖世雄 zero是什么意思宁波市东方瑞市北区英语学习交流群

  • 频道推荐
  • |
  • 全站推荐
  • 推荐下载
  • 网站推荐