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双语·股票大作手回忆录 第二十一章

所属教程:译林版·股票大作手回忆录

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2022年05月10日

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I AM well aware that all these generalities do not sound especially impressive.Generalities seldom do.Possibly I may succeed better if I give a concrete example.I'll tell you how I marked up the price of a stock 30 points,and in so doing accumulated only seven thousand shares and developed a market that would absorb almost any amount of stock.

It was Imperial Steel.The stock had been brought out by reputable people and it had been fairly well tipped as a property of value.About 30 per cent of the capital stock was placed with the general public through various Wall Street houses,but there had been no significant activity in the shares after they were listed.From time to time somebody would ask about it and one or another insider—members of the original underwriting syndicate—would say that the company's earnings were better than expected and the prospects more than encouraging.This was true enough and very good as far as it went,but not exactly thrilling.The speculative appeal was absent,and from the investor's point of view the price stability and dividend permanency of the stock were not yet demonstrated.It was a stock that never behaved sensationally.It was so gentlemanly that no corroborative rise ever followed the insiders' eminently truthful reports.On the other hand,neither did the price decline.

Imperial Steel remained unhonoured and unsung and untipped,content to be one of those stocks that don't go down because nobody sells and that nobody sells because nobody likes to go short of a stock that is not well distributed;the seller is too much at the mercy of the loaded-up inside clique.Similarly,there is no inducement to buy such a stock.To the investor Imperial Steel therefore remained a speculation.To the speculator it was a dead one—the kind that makes an investor of you against your will by the simple expedient of falling into a trance the moment you go long of it.The chap who is compelled to lug a corpse a year or two always loses more than the original cost of the deceased;he is sure to find himself tied up with it when some really good things come his way.

One day the foremost member of the Imperial Steel syndicate,acting for himself and associates,came to see me.They wished to create a market for the stock,of which they controlled the undistributed 70 per cent.They wanted me to dispose of their holdings at better prices than they thought they would obtain if they tried to sell in the open market.They wanted to know on what terms I would undertake the job.

I told him that I would let him know in a few days.Then I looked into the property.I had experts go over the various departments of the company—industrial,commercial and financial.They made reports to me which were unbiased.I wasn't looking for the good or the bad points,but for the facts,such,as they were.

The reports showed that it was a valuable property.The prospects justified purchases of the stock at the prevailing market price—if the investor were willing to wait a little.Under the circumstances an advance in the price would in reality be the commonest and most legitimate of all market movements—to wit,the process of discounting the future.There was therefore no reason that I could see why I should not conscientiously and confidently undertake the bull manipulation of Imperial Steel.

I let my man know my mind and he called at my office to talk the deal over in detail.I told him what my terms were.For my services I asked no cash,but calls on one hundred thousand shares of the Imperial Steel stock.The price of the calls ran up from 70 to 100.That may seem like a big fee to some.But they should consider that the insiders were certain they themselves could not sell one hundred thousand shares,or even fifty thousand shares,at 70.There was no market for the stock.All the talk about wonderful earnings and excellent prospects had not brought in buyers,not to any great extent.In addition,I could not get my fee in cash without my clients first making some millions of dollars.What I stood to make was not an exorbitant selling commission.It was a fair contingent fee.

Knowing that the stock had real value and that general market conditions were bullish and therefore favourable for an advance in all good stocks,I figured that I ought to do pretty well.My clients were encouraged by the opinions I expressed,agreed to my terms at once,and the deal began with pleasant feelings all around.

I proceeded to protect myself as thoroughly as I could.The syndicate owned or controlled about 70 per cent of the out standing stock.I had them deposit their 70 per cent under a trust agreement.I didn't propose to be used as a dumping ground for the big holders.With the majority holdings thus securely tied up,I still had 30 per cent of scattered holdings to consider,but that was a risk I had to take.Experienced speculators do not expect ever to engage in utterly riskless ventures.As a matter of fact,it was not much more likely that all the untrusteed stock would be thrown on the market at one fell swoop than that all the policyholders of a life-insurance company would die at the same hour,the same day.There are unprinted actuarial tables of stock-market risks as well as of human mortality.

Having protected myself from some of the avoidable dangers of a stock-market deal of that sort,I was ready to begin my campaign.Its objective was to make my calls valuable.To do this I must put up the price and develop a market in which I could sell one hundred thousand shares—the stock in which I held options.

The first thing I did was to find out how much stock was likely to come on the market on an advance.This was easily done through my brokers,who had no trouble in ascertaining what stock was for sale at or a little above the market.I don't know whether the specialists told them what orders they had on their books or not.The price was nominally 70,but I could not have sold one thousand shares at that price.I had no evidence of even a moderate demand at that figure or even a few points lower.I had to go by what my brokers found out.But it was enough to show me how much stock there was for sale and how little was wanted.

As soon as I had a line on these points I quietly took all the stock that was for sale at 7o and higher.When I say“I”you will understand that I mean my brokers.The sales were for account of some of the minority holders because my clients naturally had cancelled whatever selling orders they might have given out before they tied up their stock.

I didn't have to buy very much stock.Moreover,I knew that the right kind of advance would bring in other buying a orders—and,of course,selling orders also.

I didn't give bull tips on Impdrial Steel to anybody.I didn't have to.My job was to seek directly to influence sentiment by the best possible kind of publicity.I do not say that there should never be bull propaganda.It is as legitimate and indeed as desirable to advertise the value of a new stock as to advertise the value of woolens or shoes or automobiles.Accurate and reliable information should be given by the public.But what I meant was that the tape did all that was needed for my purpose.As I said before,the reputable newspapers always try to print explanations for market movements.It is news.Their readers demand to know not only what happens in the stock market but why it happens.Therefore without the manipulator lifting a finger the financial writers will print all the available information and gossip,and also analyse the reports of earnings,trade condition and outlook;in short,whatever may throw light on the advance.Whenever a news paperman or an acquaintance asks my opinion of a stock and I have one I do not hesitate to express it.I do not volunteer advice and I never give tips,but I have nothing to gain in my operations from secrecy.At the same time I realise that the best of all tipsters,the most persuasive of all salesmen,is the tape.

When I had absorbed all the stock that was for sale at 70 and a little higher I relieved the market of that pressure,and naturally that made clear for trading purposes the line of least resistance in Imperial Steel.It was manifestly upward.The moment that fact was perceived by the observant traders on the floor they logically assumed that the stock was in for an advance the extent of which they could not know;but they knew enough to begin buying.Their demand for Imperial Steel,created exclusively by the obviousness of the stock's rising tendency—the tape's infallible bull tip!—I promptly filled.I sold to the traders the stock that I had bought from the tired-out holders at the beginning.Of course this selling was judiciously done;I contented myself with supplying the demand.I was not forcing my stock on the market and I did not want too rapid an advance.It wouldn't have been good business to sell out the half of my one hundred thousand shares at that stage of the proceedings.My job was to make a market on which I might sell my entire line.

But even though I sold only as much as the traders were anxious to buy,the market was temporarily deprived of my own buying power,which I had hitherto exerted steadily.In due course the traders' purchases ceased and the price stopped rising.As soon as that happened there began the selling by disappointed bulls or by those traders whose reasons for buying disappeared the instant the rising tendency was checked.But I was ready for this selling,and on the way down I bought back the stock I had sold to the traders a couple of points higher.This buying of stock I knew was bound to be sold in turn checked the downward course;and when the price stopped going down the selling orders stopped coming in.

I then began all over again.I took all the stock that was for sale on the way up—it wasn't very much—and the price began to rise a second time;from a higher starting point than 70.Don't forget that on the way down there are many holders who wish to heaven they had sold theirs but won't do it three or four points from the top.Such speculators always vow they will surely sell out if there is a rally.They put in their orders to sell on the way up,and then they change their minds with the change in the stock's price-trend.Of course there is always profit taking from safe-playing quick runners to whom a profit is always a profit to be taken.

All I had to do after that was to repeat the process;alternately buying and selling;but always working higher.

Sometimes,after you have taken all the stock that is for sale,it pays to rush up the price sharply,to have what might be called little bull flurries in the stock you are manipulating.It is excellent advertising,because it makes talk and also brings in both the professional traders and that portion of the speculating public that likes action.It is,I think,a large portion.I did that in Imperial Steel,and whatever demand was created by those spurts I supplied.My selling always kept the upward movement within bounds both as to extent and as to speed.In buying on the way down and selling on the way up I was doing more than marking up the price:I was developing the marketability of Imperial Steel.

After I began my operations in it there never was a time when a man could not buy or sell the stock freely;I mean by this,buy or sell a reasonable amount without causing over-violent fluctuations in the price.The fear of being left high and dry if he bought,or squeezed to death if he sold,was gone.The gradual spread among the professionals and the public of a belief in the permanence of the market for Imperial Steel had much to do with creating confidence in the movement;and,of course,the activity also put an end to a lot of other objections.The result was that after buying and selling a good many thousands of shares I succeeded in making the stocks sell at par.At one hundred dollars a share everybody wanted to buy Imperial Steel.Why not?Everybody now knew that it was a good stock;that it had been and still was a bargain.The proof was the rise.A stock that could go thirty points from 70 could go up thirty more from par.That is the way a good many argued.

In the course of marking up the price those thirty points I accumulated only seven thousand shares.The price on this line averaged me almost exactly 85.That meant a profit of fifteen points on it;but,of course,my entire profit,still on paper,was much more.It was a safe enough profit,for I had a market for all I wanted to sell.The stock would sell higher on judicious manipulation and I had graduated calls on one hundred thousand shares beginning at 70 and ending at 100.

Circumstances prevented me from carrying out certain plans of mine for converting my paper-profits into good hard cash.It had been,if I do say so myself,a beautiful piece of manipulation,strictly legitimate and deservedly successful.The property of the company was valuable and the stock was not dear at the higher price.One of the members of the original syndicate developed a desire to secure the control of the property—a prominent banking house with ample resources.The control of a prosperous and growing concern like the Imperial Steel Corporation is possibly more valuable to a banking firm than to individual investors.At all events,this firm made me an offer for all my options on the stock.It meant an enormous profit for me,and I instantly took it.I am always willing to sell out when I can do so in a lump at a good profit.I was quite content with what I made out of it.

Before I disposed of my calls on the hundred thousand shares I learned that these bankers had employed more experts to make a still more thorough examination of the property.Their reports showed enough to bring me in the offer I got.I kept several thousand shares of the stock for investment.I believe in it.

There wasn't anything about my manipulation of Imperial Steel that wasn't normal and sound.As long as the price went up on my buying I knew I was O.K.The stock never got waterlogged,as a stock sometimes does.When you find that it fails to respond adequately to your buying you don't need any better tip to sell.You know that if there is any value to a stock and general market conditions are right you can always nurse it back after a decline,no matter if it's twenty points.But I never had to do anything like that in Imperial Steel.

In my manipulation of stocks I never lose sight of basic trading principles.Perhaps you wonder why I repeat this or why I keep on harping on the fact that I never argue with the tape or lose my temper at the market because of its behaviour.You would think—wouldn't you?—that shrewd men who have made millions in their own business and in addition have successfully operated in Wall Street at times would realise the wisdom of playing the game dispassionately.Well,you would be surprised at the frequency with which some of our most successful promoters behave like peevish women because the market does not act the way they wish it to act.They seem to take it as a personal slight,and they proceed to lose money by first losing their temper.

There has been much gossip about a disagreement between John Prentiss and myself.People have been led to expect a dramatic narrative of a stock-market deal that went wrong or some double-crossing that cost me—or him—millions;or something of that sort.Well,it wasn't.

Prentiss and I had been friendly for years.He had given me at various times information that I was able to utilize profitably,and I had given him advice which he may or may not have followed.If he did he saved money.

He was largely instrumental in the organisation and promotion of the Petroleum Products Company.After a more or less successful market début general conditions changed for the worse and the new stock did not fare as well as Prentiss and his associates had hoped.When basic conditions took a turn for the better Prentiss formed a pool and began operations in Pete Products.

I cannot tell you anything about his technique.He didn't tell me how he worked and I didn't ask him.But it was plain that notwithstanding his Wall Street experience and his undoubted cleverness,whatever it was he did proved of little value and it didn't take the pool long to find out that they couldn't get rid of much stock.He must have tried everything he knew,because a pool manager does not ask to be superseded by an outsider unless he feels unequal to the task,and that is the last thing the average man likes to admit.At all events he came to me and after some friendly preliminaries he said he wanted me to take charge of the market for Pete Products and dispose of the pool's holdings,which amounted to a little over one hundred thousand shares.The stock was selling at 102 to 103.

The thing looked dubious to me and I declined his proposition with thanks.But he insisted that I accept.He put it on personal grounds,so that in the end I consented.I constitutionally dislike to identify myself with enterprises in the success of which I cannot feel confidence,but I also think a man owes something to his friends and acquaintances.I said I would do my best,but I told him I did not feel very cocky about it and I enumerated the adverse factors that I would have to contend with.But all Prentiss said to that was that he wasn't asking me to guarantee millions in profits to the pool.He was sure that if I took hold I'd make out well enough to satisfy any reasonable being.

Well,there I was,engaged in doing something against my own judgment.I found,as I feared,a pretty tough state of affairs,due in great measure to Prentiss' own mistakes while he was manipulating the stock for account of the pool.But the chief factor against me was time.I was convinced that we were rapidly approaching the end of a bull swing and therefore that the improvement in the market,which had so encouraged Prentiss,would prove to be merely a short-lived rally.I feared that the market would turn definitely bearish before I could accomplish much with Pete Products.However,I had given my promise and I decided to work as hard as I knew how.

I started to put up the price.I had moderate success.I think I ran it up to 107 or thereabouts,which was pretty fair,and I was even able to sell a little stock on balance.It wasn't much,but I was glad not to have increased the pool's holdings.There were a lot of people not in the pool who were just waiting for a small rise to dump their stock,and I was a godsend to them.Had general conditions been better I also would have done better.It was too bad that I wasn't called in earlier.All I could do now,I felt,was to get out with as little loss as possible to the pool.

I sent for Prentiss and told him my views.But he started to object.I then explained to him why I took the position I did.I said:“Prentiss,I can feel very plainly the pulse of the market.There is no follow-up in your stock.It is no trick to see just what the public's reaction is to my manipulation.Listen:When Pete Products is made as attractive to traders as possible and you give it all the support needed at all times and notwithstanding all that you find that the public leaves it alone you may be sure that there is something wrong,not with the stock but with the market.There is absolutely no use in trying to force matters.You are bound to lose if you do.A pool manager should be willing to buy his own stock when he has company.But when he is the only buyer in the market he'd be an ass to buy it.For every five thousand shares I buy the public ought to be willing or able to buy five thousand more.But I certainly am not going to do all the buying.If I did,all I would succeed in doing would be to get soaked with a lot of long stock that I don't want.There is only one thing to do,and that is to sell.And the only way to sell is to sell.”

“You mean,sell for what you can get?”asked Prentiss.

“Right!”I said.I could see he was getting ready to object.“If I am to sell the pool's stock at all you can make up your mind that the price is going to break through par and—”

“Oh,no!Never !”he yelled.You'd have imagined I was asking him to join a suicide club.

“Prentiss,”I said to him,“it is a cardinal principle of stock manipulation to put up a stock in order to sell it.But you don't sell in bulk on the advance.You can't.The big selling is done on the way down from the top.I cannot put up your stock to 125 or 130.I'd like to,but it can't be done.So you will have to begin your selling from this level.In my opinion all stocks are going down,and Petroleum Products isn't going to be the one exception.It is better for it to go down now on the pool's selling than for it to break next month on selling by some one else.It will go down anyhow.”

I can't see that I said anything harrowing,but you could have heard his howls in China.He simply wouldn't listen to such a thing.It would never do.It would play the dickens with the stock's record,to say nothing of inconvenient possibilities at the banks where the stock was held as collateral on loans,and so on.

I told him again that in my judgment nothing in the world could prevent Pete Products from breaking fifteen or twenty points,because the entire market was headed that way,and I once more said it was absurd to expect his stock to be a dazzling exception.But again my talk went for nothing.He insisted that I support the stock.

Here was a shrewd business man,one of the most successful promoters of the day,who had made millions in Wall Street deals and knew much more than the average man about the game of speculation,actually insisting on supporting a stock in an incipient bear market.It was his stock,to be sure,but it was nevertheless bad business.So much so that it went against the grain and I again began to argue with him.But it was no use.He insisted on putting in supporting orders.

Of course when the general market got weak and the decline began in earnest Pete Products went with the rest.Instead of selling I actually bought stock for the insiders' pool—by Prentiss' orders.

The only explanation is that Prentiss did not believe the bear market was right on top of us.I myself was confident that the bull market was over.I had verified my first surmise by tests not alone in Pete Products but in other stocks as well.I didn't wait for the bear market to announce its safe arrival before I started selling.Of course I didn't sell a share of Pete Products,though I was short of other stocks.

The Pete Products pool,as I expected,was hung up with all they held to begin with and with all they had to take in their futile effort to hold up the price.In the end they did liquidate;but at much lower figures than they would have got if Prentiss had let me sell when and as I wished.It could not be otherwise.But Prentiss still thinks he was right—or says he does.I understand he says the reason I gave him the advice I did was that I was short of other stocks and the general market was going up.It implies,of course,that the break in Pete Products that would have resulted from selling out the pool's holdings at any price would have helped my bear position in other stocks.

That is all tommyrot.I was not bearish because I was short of stocks.I was bearish because that was the way I sized up the situation,and I sold stocks short only after I turned bearish.There never is much money in doing things wrong end to;not in the stock market.My plan for selling the pool's stock was based on what the experience of twenty years told me alone was feasible and therefore wise.Prentiss ought to have been enough of a trader to see it as plainly as I did.It was too late to try to do anything else.

I suppose Prentiss shares the delusion of thousands of outsiders who think a manipulator can do anything.He can't.The biggest thing Keene did was his manipulation of U.S.Steel common and preferred in the spring of 1901.He succeeded not because he was clever and resourceful and not because he had a syndicate of the richest men in the country back of him.He succeeded partly because of those reasons but chiefly because the general market was right and the public's state of mind was right.

It isn't good business for a man to act against the teachings of experience and against common sense.But the suckers in Walt Street are not all outsiders.Prentiss' grievance against me is what I have just told you.He feels sore because I did my manipulation not as I wanted to but as he asked me to.

There isn't anything mysterious or underhanded or crooked about manipulation designed to sell a stock in bulk provided such operations are not accompanied by deliberate misrepresentations.Sound manipulation must be based on sound trading principles.People lay great stress on old-time practices,such as wash sales.But I can assure you that the mere mechanics of deception count for very little.The difference between stock-market manipulation and the over-the-counter sale of stocks and bonds is in the character of the clientele rather than in the character of the appeal.J.P.Morgan & Co.sell an issue of bonds to the public—that is,to investors.A manipulator disposes of a block of stock to the public—that is,to speculators.An investor looks for safety,for permanence of the interest return on the capital he invests.The speculator looks for a quick profit.

The manipulator necessarily finds his primary marker among speculators—who are willing to run a greater than normal business risk so long as they have a reasonable chance to get a big return on their capital.I myself never have believed in blind gambling.I may plunge or I may buy one hundred shares.But in either case I must have a reason for what I do.

I distinctly remember how I got into the game of manipulation—that is,in the marketing of stocks for others.It gives me pleasure to recall it because it shows so beautifully the professional Wall Street attitude toward stock-market operations.It happened after I had“come back”— that is,after my Bethlehem Steel trade in 1915 started me on the road to financial recovery.

I traded pretty steadily and had very good luck.I have never sought newspaper publicity,but neither have I gone out of my way to hide myself.At the same time,you know that professional Wall Street exaggerates both the successes and the failures of whichever operator happens to be active;and,of course,the newspapers hear about him and print rumors.I have been broke so many times,according to the gossips,or have made so many millions,according to the same authorities,that my only reaction to such reports is to wonder how and where they are born.And how they grow!I have had broker friend after broker friend bring the same story to me,a little changed each time,improved,more circumstantial.

All this preface is to tell you how I first came to undertake the manipulation of a stock for someone else.The stories the newspapers printed of how I had paid back in full the millions I owed did the trick.My plungings and my winnings were so magnified by the newspapers that I was talked about in Wall Street.The day was past when an operator swinging a line of two hundred thousand shares of stock could dominate the market.But,as you know,the public always desires to find successors to the old leaders.It was Mr.Keene's reputation as a skilful stock operator,a winner of millions on his own hook,that made promoters and banking houses apply to him for selling large blocks of securities.In short,his services as manipulator were in demand because of the stories the Street had heard about his previous successes as a trader.

But Keene was gone—passed on to that heaven where he once said he wouldn't stay a moment unless he found Sysonby there waiting for him.Two or three other men who made stock-market history for a few months had relapsed into the obscurity of prolonged inactivity.I refer particularly to certain of those plunging Westerners who came to Wall Street in 1901 and after making many millions out of their Steel holdings remained in Wall Street.They were in reality super promoters rather than operators of the Keene type.But they were extremely able,extremely rich and extremely successful in the securities of the companies which they and their friends controlled.They were not really great manipulators,like Keene or Governor Flower.Still,the Street found in them plenty to gossip about and they certainly had a following among the professionals and the sportier commission houses.After they ceased to trade actively the Street found itself without manipulators;at least,it couldn't read about them in the newspapers.

You remember the big bull market that began when the Stock Exchange resumed business in 1915.As the market broadened and the Allies' purchases in this country mounted into billions we ran into a boom.As far as manipulation went,it wasn't necessary for anybody to lift a finger to create an unlimited market for a war bride.Scores of men made millions by capitalizing contracts or even promises of contracts.They became successful promoters,either with the aid of friendly bankers or by bringing out their companies on the Curb market.The public bought anything that was adequately touted.

When the bloom wore off the boom,some of these promoters found themselves in need of help from experts in stock salesmanship.When the public is hung up with all kinds of securities,some of them purchased at higher prices,it is not an easy task to dispose of untried stocks.After a boom the public is positive that nothing is going up.It isn't that buyers become more discriminating,but that the blind buying is over.It is the state of mind that has changed.Prices don't even have to go down to make people pessimistic.It is enough if the market gets dull and stays dull for a time.

In every boom companies are formed primarily if not exclusively to take advantage of the public's appetite for all kinds of stocks.Also there are belated promotions.The reason why promoters make that mistake is that being human they are unwilling to see the end of the boom.More-over,it is good business to take chances when the possible profit is big enough.The top is never in sight when the vision is vitiated by hope.The average man sees a stock that nobody wanted at twelve dollars or fourteen dollars a share suddenly advance to thirty—which surely is the top—until it rises to fifty.That is absolutely the end of the rise.Then it goes to sixty;to seventy;to seventy-five.It then becomes a certainty that this stock,which a few weeks ago was selling for less than fifteen,can't go any higher.But it goes to eighty;and to eighty-five.Whereupon the average man,who never thinks of values but of prices,and is not governed in his actions by conditions but by fears,takes the easiest way—he stops thinking that there must be a limit to the advances.That is why those outsiders who are wise enough not to buy at the top make up for it by not taking profits.The big money in booms is always made first by the public—on paper.And it remains on paper.

我知道,这些通用的规则是不会让人产生多深刻的印象的,它们就只能这样。如果我举个实实在在的例子,可能会说得更清楚些。我要对你讲,我是怎么通过只买进7000股就将一只股票的价格抬升了30个点的,我创造了一个了不起的市场,它差不多能够容纳任何一只数量庞大的股票。

这只股票名为帝国钢铁,是一群很有声望的人推上市的股票,也做了非常好的宣传,被认定为资产股。华尔街上的几家公司拥有这只股票的百分之三十,用以销售给广大股民。只是它挂牌后,一直交易萎缩,有时候也会有人问到这只股票,就会有一两个股票承销公司的内部人员说,这家公司的盈余比预期要好,前途非常让人兴奋。说得一点儿没错,确实如此,只是没那么让人兴奋,又没有什么亮点诱发投机。从投资角度看,价格是否稳定,能不能持续配股,都没有确定。它就一直没有过引人关注的走向变动,表现太中庸了,即便在公司内部发布了真实报告后,依然没有引起多少上涨,同时,股价也没有多少下跌。

帝国钢铁一直处于这样没名气、没人追捧,也没人传播内幕消息的状态之中,是一只没有人卖出,所以不会下跌的股票。没人卖出,是因为谁都不想放空股权相对集中的股票,因为如果放空就会对空头的地位不利,会受到公司内部操控。同时,也没什么值得买进的理由。所以对投资人而言,帝国钢铁股票是一只投机股。而对投机分子来说,它不冷也不热,你一旦买进做多,它就容易陷入昏睡套牢状态,你的投资思想不支持你这么做。一个人无奈地拖着一具尸体长达一两年,失去的要比尸体的原始成本还高,如果有真正的好东西出现了,他会发现自己被捆绑得不能动弹了。

有一天,帝国钢铁公司的一位重要人士代表他自己和他的同事来找我,表达了想让我为这只股票创造市场的意愿。他们手中有百分之七十的股票都没有卖出。他们希望我能够把那些股票处理给市场,卖出比他们绞尽脑汁在公开市场上售价还高的价位。他们想知道我要接受这个工作的话,需要多少酬金。

我对他说,过几天就让他们知道我的条件。随后我开始分析这只股票,请了一些专业人士去调查这家公司,生产、财务、业务等各个部门都搞清楚。他们给出的报告很中性,而我并非要知道好坏,只是想知道真实的现状罢了。

根据报告,这是一只很有价值的股票,如果投资人愿意等待的话,公司的未来发展会证明,按照现在的市场行情买进这只股是非常划算的。鉴于此,从市场波动上来说,最合理、最容易出现的就是股价上涨。意思是,分析了未来可能出现的情况后得出结论,股价应该会上涨。所以,我找不到不谨慎而有信心地为帝国钢铁公司做一次炒作的理由。

我告诉那个人,让他到我办公室商谈具体事宜。我告诉了他我的条件,我不要现金,只要帝国钢铁10万股的认购权,价格从70到100美元不等。在一些人眼中,这是狮子大开口,可他们应该想到的是,凭他们自己是没办法以70美元卖出10万股的,连5万股都卖不出去。这是一只没市场号召力的股票,一切利于未来的宣传都没吸引到多少人来买。而且,除非他们公司自己先赚到几百万,不然我也不可能拿到我的酬金。我能赚的不是很高的代销费,而是按比较公平的方式,以事情是否成功来决定的酬劳。

我清楚这是一只真正值钱的股票,股市大盘也在看涨,所以对好股票的价格上涨是有利的,我觉得自己可以做好。我提出的想法让客户深受鼓舞,他马上就同意了我的条件,这是个从一开始就令人愉悦的交易。

我尽力从根本上先维护好自己的安全。公司内部控制着百分之七十左右的流通股票,我让他们按照信托合约把这些股票锁定,我不想让大股东们成为股市垃圾场。锁定了这一大半股票后,我还要考虑其余百分之三十散落在市场中的股票,这也是我需要承担的风险。作为一个投机人员,我没想过做无风险的事情。其实所有股票一起进入市场的可能性很小,不会高于人寿保险公司的所有顾客在同一时间死亡的可能性。股市与人命相同,都有一本没有发行的账目。

我先进行了自我保护,免得受到本可避免的风险伤害,然后就行动起来了。我要做的是让我的认购权有价值,想实现目标就要拉抬股价,制造一个我能够卖出我那有认购权的10万股的市场。

我首先要做的是,明确在股价上涨的时候,市场上会进来多少股票。我的经纪商很轻松就搞清楚了这一点,他们一点儿困难都没遇到,就知道了在比现在行情高一点儿的价位上到底有多少股票在等待卖出。我不清楚是不是交易场里的中介专家们告诉他们说,交易场内的账户上有这么多卖单。此时的股价说是70美元,但按照这个价格,我连1000股都卖不出去。我连在这个价格甚至更低点的价格上有一点儿交易需求的证据都没有,我必须要按照经纪商提供的资料数据来开展工作,可这些数据也不能让我确定出想买卖的股票到底有多少。

我拿到这些资料后,就偷偷在70美元和稍微高一点儿的价位上买进了所有出售的股票。你知道的,我说的“我”实际上指的是我的经纪商。那些出售的单子都来自小股民,因为公司在封锁自己的持股前,就取消了所有卖单。

我并不需要买多少股票,而且我清楚适当的上涨会引发其他人购买股票,当然也会出现卖出的情况。

我没有向任何一个人透露帝国钢铁股票上涨的消息,我没必要这么做,我要凭借最好的宣传直接提升人气。我的意思不是说不需要多头宣传。纯新股票的价值,跟宣传羊毛产品、鞋或汽车的价值一样,是很合理也很有必要的。应该让股民们自己谈论精确可靠的消息。不过,我的意思是股市大盘为我做好了这方面的需求准备。我之前提过,信誉度高的报纸媒体总会想办法刊发能够为市场波动提供解释的文章,这就是新闻。读者不光想知道股市上出现了什么,也想知道为什么会出现。所以,作手根本不需要花力气,那些金融记者就会发表能扒拉出来的一切消息或谣言,还会对盈余、产业和发展方向等情况做分析报道,简单讲就是他们会报道出来为股市上涨做解释的新线索。当记者和认识的人向我问起关于这只股票的情况时,我会张口就说出心中的那只股票。我不需要自己提建议,也不透露内幕消息,不过我如果用背后偷着去做的方式来操作,一点儿益处都没有。我也知道,在所有透露内幕消息的人和业务代表里面,股票大盘的走向才最优秀、最具说服力。

我按照70美元和更高一点儿的价格买进了所有出售的股票,消除了市场压力。从交易目的的角度来看,这就表明帝国钢铁股票的最小阻力线显然是朝上走的。交易大厅里那些具备很强观察力的营业员看到其概况,就会很自然地把这只股票看作会上涨的股票,至于幅度他们不会知道,可这已经足够让他们考虑买进了。这只股票很明朗的上涨势头,致使他们对帝国钢铁有了需求,大盘走势提供的是最不会出错的信息。我马上就顺应这样的需求了。我卖掉了那些从疲惫不堪的股东手中买来的股票,他们被套了很久。我自然会万分谨慎、很高兴向市场提供这些需求。我不会向市场大力去销售股票,我不想让上涨势头过于迅速,在刚开始的时候,就把我的10万股卖掉一半一定不是好事。我要做的是搭建一个市场,从而能够销售掉手中的股票。

可是,就算我只卖出了那些营业员想要的股票数量,也还是丢掉了到现在为止还比较稳定的市场买盘。时机到了以后,营业员就不再买进,价格也就会停滞。如果这样,那些沮丧的多头就会抛售,因为没了涨势,就没有了买进的理由,营业员会跟着卖。可我已经准备好了面对这样的卖压。股价跌的时候,我买回之前以高出几美元的价格卖出的股票。我明白这样肯定会让股票不再下跌,也就会阻止股民们卖出。

接着,我从头再做一次。一路向上,把所有要卖的股票都买进,其实没有多少数量,股价也会再次涨高,从比70美元高些的起点开始涨。不要忘记,在股价下跌的时候,许多人都急于卖掉手中的股票,可不想在头部以下三四点的价位往外卖。这样的投机人总向天发誓要在下次反弹的时候再卖掉。在股价上涨的时候,他们开始出售股票,等看到了股价走势发生了变化,又跟着改变初衷。也有些想赚个安稳钱的人会迅速卖掉股票获得利润,在他们眼里,只有落了袋的利润才是真正的利润。

如此反复,我一次次地这样做,来回买卖交易,总是能把股价炒作得更高些。

有的时候,当你买了所有想卖出的股票时,对迅速拉升股价是有好处的,你要炒作的这只股票就会猛涨。这就形成了一个很好的广告契机,因为股票的剧烈涨势本身就成了人们的谈资,就会吸引到专业的玩家和喜欢热闹股票的股民们。我觉得这样的人特别多。我这样操作帝国钢铁股票时,猛烈上涨所带来的购买需求我会全部满足。我的卖单限制了股票上涨的速度和幅度,我持续买进,又持续卖出,不光能抬升股价,还能为帝国钢铁公司的股票拓展出很好的市场。

自从我开始炒作后,这只股票再也没有那种不能自由交易的情况。我的意思是,针对这只股票做很大的交易,都不会使得股价有太厉害的波动。股民们的那种买了以后就会被套牢或者卖出后被轧死的恐惧感不复存在了。因为谁都相信帝国钢铁股票市场会一直活跃,它也就慢慢分售到了专家和普通股民的手里,这与股价的波动让大家产生了炒股信心相关。同时,交易活跃也解决了其他方面的很多困难。最终,经过我买卖了成千上万股后,它的价格成功被拉升到了面值以上。所有人都想按照每股100美元的价格买进帝国钢铁,谁都知道这是一只很好的股票,为什么不买呢?现在跟以前一样便宜,涨势就能说明一切。许多人都觉得,一只股票如果能够从70美元上涨到100美元,那就也有从100美元涨到130美元的可能。

把价格拉升30点的过程中,我只买了7000股。这一批股票,平均持股价格在85美元左右,这就说明我每股赚了15美元。利润还只是在账面上,不过我的所有利润可要大大多于这个,而且非常稳当,因为我已经搭建了一个大市场,足够让我卖出所有的股票了。经过聪明的炒作,这只股票还会上涨,我手里有10万股的认购权,认购价位也在逐渐上涨,从70美元逐步到100美元。

因为后来行情的发展,使得我没有依计而行,把账面利润套现。请允许我自夸一下,我觉得这是一次非常成功的炒作,而且很符合法律法规。成功是行情发展的必然结果。帝国钢铁公司的资产价值很高,股票价位处于高点但也不算贵。原来的承销商里有些成员希望保住这只股的控制权,这是一家实力雄厚的银行。对于银行来说,控制帝国钢铁这样业务好又有发展空间的公司,或许比交给那些散户去控制更好。反正,银行让我把股票的所有认购权都转让出来。这就说明我可以得到一笔很大的利润,所以我马上就同意了。能够卖出这么一笔,从而赚取很多资金,这么做是我非常乐意的。我对自己在这只股票上的所获利润特别满意。

我在转让出那10万股票的认购权之前,获悉那些银行家找了经验丰富的专家评估了这家公司。他们提供的报告为这家银行请我让出认购权提供了理由。我手里仍然有帝国钢铁公司的几千股,我对它信心十足。

在炒作帝国钢铁的股票时,我没有做出任何不正确或者不合适的事。我的买盘如果能使得股价上涨,我就知道不会有什么问题。股票是会出现没法拉抬的情况,可这只股票却从没有萎靡过。当你在买进股票时,它没有什么反应,那就不必考虑获知更好的内幕消息,直接卖出。如果你清楚一只股票的价值很高,市场行情也非常好,你总能在股价下跌后把它再拉升起来,就算跌了20点都可以再拉升。不过,在帝国钢铁股票上,我一直都没必要这么去做。

在炒作股票的时候,我从没有忘掉基本的交易原则。可能你会奇怪,我为什么要反反复复说这一点,或者我为什么要强调不与股市大盘较劲,不因为市场的行为而责怪大盘。你肯定觉得,在事业上赚了好几百万,在华尔街证券交易中操作得很成功的人,必定懂得玩这个游戏的时候要非常冷静,是吧?如果你知道一些非常成功的大公司委派的那些炒作高手常常因为市场的发展走向与他们的预估不相符,从而焦灼得像个小女人的时候,你定会吃惊不小。这样的事情在他们眼里就是个莫大的侮辱,然后他们会因为自己的坏脾气损失掉金钱。

坊间流传着很多我与布兰迪之间关系不好的说法。人们都受到了误导,觉得我俩迟早会因为某个股票上的操作而闹翻,从而产生激烈的矛盾,而操作也会失败,或者会涉及一些诈骗行为,使得我们中的一位付出几百万或者类似的代价。呃,实际上并不是这样的。

布兰迪是我多年的老朋友,为我提供过好多次股市信息,我也因此获利不少。而我也对他提出过很多建议,他或者采纳了,也或者没采纳。如果他采纳了,就会节省一笔钱,因为他是一位推动石油产品公司上市和稀释股权的人。那只股票在成功上市后,综合行情不好,新股的表现没有布兰迪和他的合作伙伴们预料的那么好。情势转好后,布兰迪又召集了一个小组,来操作石油产品公司。

至于他使用的技巧,我不能告诉你。我没有问,他也没告诉我是怎么做的,不过在华尔街上,虽然他的经验很多,人也比较精明,可他做的一切努力都没有丝毫价值。没多久,这个公司就发现,他们在股票出售上丝毫没有办法。他肯定尝试过自己想到的所有办法,因为公司内部的操手们只有在确定自己不能够操作时,才会找外部专业人士帮忙,而这个事情是普通人士不愿意承认的。反正他就来找我了,很客气地说了些见面语后,他提出想让我来把油品公司的股票推出去,这个公司大概有10万多的持股。当时,它的价格在102到103美元。

我觉得这是个稀里糊涂的事情,所以委婉地拒绝了他,不过他还是坚持让我接受这次合作。他从他个人的角度来请我帮忙,我只好同意。我天生就不喜欢去掺和那些我没有把握做成的事情,可同时我觉得人应该对亲戚朋友们承担一些责任。所以我说我会尽力去做,不过同时我也说了,这件事我没有什么必胜的把握,也说了我必定会遇到的困难。可布兰迪却说,他不需要我保证能为公司赚几百万,他对我很有信心,觉得我做就会实现一个让所有理智的人都满意的目标。

是啊,事情就是这样,我答应了一件与我的判断不相符的事情。正如我的担心那样,我发现事情的发展举步维艰,主因还是源于布兰迪炒作这个公司的时候,出过一些错。对我来说,不利因素是时间。我坚信多头涨势很快就要结束,所以市场行情虽然有一点儿改观,布兰迪也受到了些鼓舞,可事实最终必定会证明,这就是个小小的回光返照而已。我怕在自己为油品公司股票做出成绩之前,市场就会变成空头。可我已经许诺过,所以还是要放手一搏。

我开始拉抬股价,但是并不顺畅。我觉得我把股价抬高到107美元左右的时候,就很不错了,我还能卖出一些股票。虽然不多,可让我高兴的是,没加大他们的持股总数。很多公司外的人在等着出现小幅度的上涨,以便卖出手中的股票。在他们看来,我会为他们创造绝佳的机会。如果综合行情好的话,我的表现可能会好一些。他们没早些让我来做,简直是个很糟糕的事情。我认为现在我只能尽力让他们以最小损失卖掉持股。

我把布兰迪叫来,对他讲了我的意思。他一开始不同意,然后我向他解释了我这么做的原因,我说:“布兰迪,我能够清晰地感受到市场脉搏,没人理会你的股票。想知道人们对我的炒作会产生什么反应并不要什么技巧。听着,当你尽力把油品公司的股票包装得吸引人,也准备随时提供所需的支持时,却发现人们不买账,你就能够确定其中存在问题了。不是股票的问题,而是市场的问题。违背股市行情行事不会起什么作用的。如果这么做,一定会赔本。有人跟进了,操盘的人就应该赶紧买回股票,可是如果市场上只有他一个买盘,那他还买的话就太蠢了。我买进5000股的时候,人们也愿意或者有能力跟买5000股,可我确实不想独自来买。我若这样做,就只是积攒了我并不想要的一些做多的股票。此刻能做的只有一件事情,那就是卖,往出卖才是唯一的办法。”

“你的意思是不管多少钱都卖?”布兰迪问。

“是的!”我说。察觉到他想马上反对,我赶紧说,“我如果卖出这只股票,你应该清楚,价格必定跌破面值,而且……”

“不,这可不行!”他大声说道。听他的声音,你一定以为我是在邀请他参加杀人俱乐部。

“布兰迪,”我说,“炒作股票的基本原则是要抬高股价以便卖出。可你在上涨的时候不能大量卖出,你做不到。大量往外卖,要从头部一直下跌的时候开始。我没办法让股价达到125美元或者130美元。我想要这个结果可无能为力。因此,你必须要按照目前的价格卖出。我觉得,所有股票都要跌,油品公司不会逃得过。反正都要下跌,与其等下个月那些股民抛售导致剧烈下跌,还不如现在你们公司自己卖。”

我不觉得我说的话会让人心痛,可是就算你身在万里之外的中国,也会听到他痛苦的喊叫。他一点儿都听不进去我的话。这肯定是不行的,这样会让这只股票留下非常糟糕的记录,更别提它在银行质押贷款可能造成的那些麻烦了。

我继续对他说:“我觉得世界上不存在什么力量能防止油品公司的股票下跌15或者20个点,因为整个股市都要这样下跌。”我接着对他讲,“如果我希望他的股票会是个让人惊讶的例外,那就太荒谬了。”可我说的话一点儿作用都没起到,他一直坚持让我必须要尽力支撑住这只股票。

我眼前的这个人,是个聪明的商人,以前最成功的股票作手之一,在华尔街股市上赚过几百万美元的人,他对炒股游戏的知晓要比普通人深入得多,可是却在空头市场的初期,坚持要支撑一只股票。当然了,股票是他的没错,可做法确实特别不靠谱。总的来说,这是一件不符合规则的事情。我与他据理力争,可是起不了任何作用,他顽固地让我买进以给予支撑。

在股市大盘疲软、股市真正开始了暴跌的时候,油品公司自然不能例外。只是,我不仅没有卖出,还因为布兰迪的坚持,为他们买进了很多股票。

布兰迪这么做的唯一原因是他不相信空头市场已经来临。我坚信多头市场已近尾声,我不光用油品公司测试了市场,也通过买卖其他股票进行了测试,为我起初的猜测给以验证。我不会在完全属于空头市场的时候才去放空股票。至于油品公司,我自然一股都没卖,只放空了其他的股票。

就像我想的那样,油品公司把他们一开始就有的股票和为了拉抬股价却丝毫作用没起而买进的股票全部抱在了怀里,最终的结果还是卖掉了股票,可与布兰迪不让我卖的那个时候相比,他们卖出的价格更低。这不可能有其他结果,可布兰迪还是觉得他们没错,或者他自己没做错。我清楚的是,他说我向他提意见,是因为我放空了其他的股票,可是股市依然是上升趋势。这明显是在说,如果没有进行限价就买完手中的股票,会让油品公司股票暴跌,这样会帮助我在其他股票的空头部位。

这纯粹是信口开河。我不看好股市行情,并非我放空了股票,而是因为我预估股市大盘的发展走向就是这样,我只有在自己从做多转为做空的时候,才会放空。朝着错的方向走,不会有钱可赚,尤其是炒股。我打算卖掉他们的股票,是因为二十年来的经验告诉我,这是最靠谱的操作。布兰迪本应是个很厉害的交易者,能够跟我一样搞明白情势才对。那时候,要做什么事情都为时已晚了。

我觉得布兰迪与大量不懂行的人类似,产生了错觉,认为一位作手什么都可以做到,没什么不可以。作手们可没有这样的本事,没办法做到。凯恩最大的成就是1901年春天炒作美国钢铁公司普通股与特别股。他做到了,不是因为他多么智慧过人或者资金多么庞大,也不是因为他背后有一大堆全美国的牛气富豪为他撑腰。这些都只是片面因素,主要还是因为当时股市大盘和股民们的心理状况都非常适合炒作。

与经验和常识不符的做法不是什么好做法,华尔街的笨蛋们不都是不懂行的人。布兰迪不满意我的做法,我刚刚已经说了。他非常痛心,原因是我违背了自己的意愿而居然按照他的要求炒作了。

只要炒作的过程中不添加肆意歪曲的成分,只是把手里的股票卖掉,就没什么神秘可言,也不会有不公平和欺诈的因子。炒作要健全,必须要有健全的交易原则作支撑。人们都很重视洗盘等这些老式的手段,可我保证,纯粹的技巧并没多大重要性。顾客性质不同,使得炒作股票和在柜台交易股票和证券有一定的差别,并不是因为人们的诉求不一样。摩根公司卖出证券,是卖给投资人,而炒作股票的作手卖出股票,是卖给投机分子。投资人想要的是稳中求胜,为投出的资本找到源源不断的回报,而投机分子要的是迅速获得利润。

股票作手的主要市场目标在投机人群中,投机者们只要机会合适,能够看到大笔好处,就想冒着高于正常状态的险去赚钱。这种盲目的赌法我并不相信,我可能会大笔操作,也可能只操作100股,可不管哪种情形,我都要找到要那么做的充分理由。

我记得很清楚,自己是如何投入到股票炒作——也就是帮别人行销股票——的游戏中的,提起这事我就非常愉悦,因为它能够很巧妙地展现出华尔街上的行家们是怎样看待股市操作的。这事发生在我那次东山再起以后,也就是1915年我交易完伯利恒钢铁股票并且收回资本的时候。

我的交易很稳定,运气也不差。我从来不想着通过报纸露面,不过我也不刻意回避。同时你也清楚,华尔街的专家们总会特意夸大活跃玩家的成败事迹。报纸会根据一点儿内幕消息刊登报道。按照谣言的说法,我都破产过多次了。按照一些很权威的人所传的那样,我也赚过几千万美元,所以对于那些传言,我只能做出一个反应,那就是很难理解它们是怎么来的,为什么会传播开来。我很吃惊的是,谣言怎么会这么猛烈。那些营业员朋友常常会来对我讲同一个故事,每一次都与上一次略有不同,故事在慢慢增加新的内容,然后逐步详尽起来。

我唆了这么多,只是要让你知道,我是怎样开始了帮别人炒作的业务。我偿还了那几百万美元的事情经过报纸报道后,发挥了很大的作用。我每次大量买进或卖出,都会被报纸无限放大,搞得我成了华尔街上的谈资。作手只要炒作20万股就可以完全操纵股市的时期已经不复存在了,可你知道,人们总想着要寻找一个能替代旧时代的新时代标杆。凯恩用高超的技巧博得了股票大作手的名气,依靠自己的本事赚了成千上百万美金,那些银行和承销商邀请他代操股市,帮他们抛售股票。简单地说,华尔街上流传着他过去的成功事迹,所以市场确实也需要他的炒作服务。

可凯恩已经离世了,此后还出现过两三个创造了几个月股市历史的人物,他们因为很久没有动静了,已经销声匿迹。我说的是那几位大手笔玩股票的西部人,他们于1901年来华尔街后,依靠自己拥有的美国钢铁公司股票赚了数千万美元。他们其实是大型股票承销商,不是凯恩那样的大作手。可他们的确很厉害,还很有钱,在推销他们与朋友控股的公司证券方面做出了很大的成绩。他们实际上与凯恩或者弗劳尔州长不一样,并非伟大的作手,可华尔街人还是觉得有一大堆关于他们的事情可谈论。在专业的炒股手和活跃的证券交易商当中,肯定有他们的一批忠实粉丝。他们不再积极交易以后,华尔街上再也找不到值得人们谈论的作手了,起码在报纸上很难出现相关报道了。

你该记得,1915年交易所恢复了业务后,在一段时期内,出现过很大的多头市场。市场规模不断扩大,协约国在美国买了价值数十亿美元的物资,美国从而变得异常繁荣。如论炒作,谁都不必花费多少心力,就能为战争带来的新形势创造出很大的市场。大量的人依靠合约,甚至依靠可以得到合约的口头承诺,就赚了几百万美元。他们靠着乐于帮忙的银行家,或者靠着让自己的公司在没有上市的市场中开展买卖,成了非常成功的股票承销商。任何一个被宣传过的东西,人们都会争相购买。

繁荣的高潮过后,这些承销商觉得自己需要一些股票专业人士来帮忙。当人们对各种证券感兴趣的时候,有的人以较高价格买进。想卖掉没在市场中经历风雨的股票是很难的事情。高潮过后,人们都确证,任何东西的价格都不再上涨了。这并非买的人变明智了,而是那种盲目的购买已经到了尾声,人们的心态变了。市价不用下跌,就让人们都变得很悲观。市场只要沉闷一定的时间后,就会出现这样的情况。

每一次市场繁荣的时候,都有一批公司冒出来,即便它们出现的原因不全是想借助人们强大的购买力赚钱,但至少主要原因是这样。有的人犹豫很久才把股票拿出来承销。承销公司出现这样的失误,原因是他们也只是人而已,不想让繁荣的现实离去。而且,只要潜在利润能大的话,就值得冒险一试。当希望遮挡了视线的时候,你就没办法看清头部。普通人见一只12美元或者14美元没人买的股票一下子涨到了30美元,以为这就是最高点了,可它却又上升到了50美元,这就必定是到了上涨的顶部了,可接着它又涨到60美元、70美元,然后到75美元。这样的局面能够确定了,几周前还是15美元,现在肯定不再涨了。可是,它又涨到了80美元,接着是85美元。此时,大多数普通股民都只想的是价格,而不去思考它应有的价值,同时他们的行动不是由情势主导,而是由恐惧主导,所以他们就采用了最容易的方式,不再觉得涨势会到头。就因为这个原因,不懂行的人可能虽然非常聪明,不在头部买进股票,但是也不获利落袋。市场繁荣景气的时候,人们总是先赚到很多账面上的利润,而最终只能把它们保持在账面上。

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