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双语·股票大作手回忆录 第二十三章

所属教程:译林版·股票大作手回忆录

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2022年05月12日

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SPECULATION in stocks will never disappear.It isn't desirable that it should.It cannot be checked by warnings as to its dangers.You cannot prevent people from guessing wrong no matter how able or how experienced they may be.Carefully laid plans will miscarry because the unexpected and even the unexpectable will happen.Disaster may come from a convulsion of nature or from the weather,from your own greed or from some man's vanity;from fear or from uncontrolled hope.But apart from what one might call his natural foes,a speculator in stocks has to contend with certain practices or abuses that are indefensible morally as well as commercially.

As I look back and consider what were the common practices twenty-five years ago when I first came to Wall Street,I have to admit that there have been many changes for the better.The old-fashioned bucket shops are gone,though bucketeering“brokerage”houses still prosper at the expense of men and women who persist in playing the game of getting rich quick.The Stock Exchange is doing excellent work not only in getting after these out-and-out swindlers but in insisting upon strict adherence to its rules by its own members.Many wholesome regulations and restrictions are now strictly enforced but there is still room for improvement.The ingrained conservatism of Wall Street rather than ethical callousness is to blame for the persistence of certain abuses.

Difficult as profitable stock speculation always has been it is becoming even more difficult every day.It was not so long ago when a real trader could have a good working knowledge of practically every stock on the list.In 1901,when J.P.Morgan brought out the United States Steel Corporation,which was merely a consolidation of lesser consolidations most of which were less than two years old,the Stock Exchange had 275 stocks on its list and about 100 in its“unlisted department”;and this included a lot that a chap didn't have to know anything about because they were small issues,or inactive by reason of being minority or guaranteed stocks and therefore lacking in speculative attractions.In fact,an overwhelming majority were stocks in which there had not been a sale in years.Today there are about 900 stocks on the regular list and in our recent active markets about 600 separate issues were traded in.Moreover,the old groups or classes of stocks were easier to keep track of.They not only were fewer but the capitalization was smaller and the news a trader had to be on the lookout for did not cover so wide a field.But today,a man is trading in everything;almost every industry in the world is represented.It requires more time and more work to keep posted and to that extent stock speculation has become much more difficult for those who operate intelligently.

There are many thousands of people who buy and sell stocks speculatively but the number of those who speculate profitably is small.As the public always is“in”the market to some extent,it follows that there are losses by the public all the time.The speculator's deadly enemies are:Ignorance,greed,fear and hope.All the statute books in the world and all the rules of all the Exchanges on earth cannot eliminate these from the human animal.Accidents which knock carefully conceived plans sky-high also are beyond regulation by bodies of cold-blooded economists or warm-hearted philanthropists.There remains another source of loss and that is,deliberate misinformation as distinguished from straight tips.And because it is apt to come to a stock trader variously disguised and camouflaged,it is the more insidious and dangerous.

The average outsider,of course,trades either on tips or on rumours,spoken or printed,direct or implied.Against ordinary tips you cannot guard.For instance,a lifelong friend sincerely desires to make you rich by telling you what he has done,that is,to buy or sell some stock.His intent is good.If the tip goes wrong what can you do?Also against the professional or crooked tipster the public is protected to about the same extent that he is against gold-bricks or wood-alcohol.But against the typical Wall Street rumours,the speculating public has neither protection nor redress.Wholesale dealers in securities,manipulators,pools and individuals resort to various devices to aid them in disposing of their surplus holdings at the best possible prices.The circulation of bullish items by the newspapers and the tickers is the most pernicious of all.

Get the slips of the financial news-agencies any day and it will surprise you to see how many statements of an implied semi-official nature they print.The authority is some“leading insider”or“a prominent director”or“a high official”or someone“in authority”who presumably knows what he is talking about.Here are today's slips.I pick an item at random.Listen to this:“A leading banker says it is too early yet to expect a declining market.”

Did a leading banker really say that and if he said it why did he say it?Why does he not allow his name to be printed?Is he afraid that people will believe him if he does?

Here is another one about a company the stock of which has been active this week.This time the man who makes the statement is a“prominent director.”Now which—if any—of the company's dozen directors is doing the talking?It is plain that by remaining anonymous nobody can be blamed for any damage that may be done by the statement.

Quite apart from the intelligent study of speculation everywhere the trader in stocks must consider certain facts in connection with the game in Wall Street.In addition to trying to determine how to make money one must also try to keep from losing money.It is almost as important to know what not to do as to know what should be done.It is therefore well to remember that manipulation of some sort enters into practically all advances in individual stocks and that such advances are engineered by insiders with one object in view and one only and that is to sell at the best profit possible.However,the average broker's customer believes himself to be a business man from Missouri if he insists upon being told why a certain stock goes up.Naturally,the manipulators“explain”the advance in a way calculated to facilitate distribution.I am firmly convinced that the public's losses would be greatly reduced if no anonymous statements of a bullish nature were allowed to be printed.I mean statements calculated to make the public buy or hold stocks.

The overwhelming majority of the bullish articles printed on the authority of unnamed directors or insiders convey unreliable and misleading impressions to the public.The public loses many millions of dollars every year by accepting such statements as semi-official and therefore trustworthy.

Say for example that a company has gone through a period of depression in its particular line of business.The stock is inactive.The quotation represents the general and presumably accurate belief of its actual value.If the stock were too cheap at that level somebody would know it and buy it and it would advance.If too dear somebody would know enough to sell it and the price would decline.As nothing happens one way or another nobody talks about it or does anything.

The turn comes in the line of business the company is engaged in.Who are the first to know it,the insiders or the public?You can bet it isn't the public.What happens next?Why,if the improvement continues the earnings will increase and the company will be in position to resume dividends on the stock;or,if dividends were not discontinued,to pay a higher rate.That is,the value of the stock will increase.

Say that the improvement keeps up.Does the management make public that glad fact?Does the president tell the stockholders?Does a philanthropic director come out with a signed statement for the benefit of that part of the public that reads the financial page in the newspapers and the slips of the news agencies?Does some modest insider pursuing his usual policy of anonymity come out with an unsigned statement to the effect that the company's future is most promising?Not this time.Not a word is said by anyone and no statement whatever is printed by newspapers or tickers.

The value-making information is carefully kept from the public while the now taciturn“prominent insiders”go into the market and buy all the cheap stock they can lay their hands on.As this well-informed but unostentatious buying keeps on,the stock rises.The financial reporters,knowing that the insiders ought to know the reason for the rise,ask questions.The unanimously anonymous insiders unanimously declare that they have no news to give out.They do not know that there is any warrant for the rise.Sometimes they even state that they are not particularly concerned with the vagaries of the stock market or the actions of stock speculators.

The rise continues and there comes a happy day when those who know have all the stock they want or can carry.The Street at once begins to hear all kinds of bullish rumours.The tickers tell the traders“on good authority”that the company has definitely turned the corner.The same modest director who did not wish his name used when he said he knew no warrant for the rise in the stock is now quoted—of course not by name—as saying that the stockholders have every reason to feel greatly encouraged over the outlook.

Urged by the deluge of bullish news items the public begins to buy the stock.These purchases help to put the price still higher.In due course the predictions of the uniformly unnamed directors come true and the company resumes dividend payments;or increases the rate,as the case may be.With that the bullish items multiply.They not only are more numerous than ever but much more enthusiastic.A“leading director,”asked point blank for a statement of conditions,informs the world that the improvement is more than keeping up.A“prominent insider,”after much coaxing,is finally induced by a news-agency to confess that the earnings are nothing short of phenomenal.A“well-known banker,”who is affiliated in a business way with the company,is made to say that the expansion in the volume of sales is simply unprecedented in the history of the trade.If not another order came in the company would run night and day for heaven knows how many months.A“member of the finance committee,”in a double-leaded manifesto,expresses his astonishment at the public's astonishment over the stock's rise.The only astonishing thing is the stock's moderation in the climbing line.Anybody who will analyse the forthcoming annual report can easily figure how much more than the market-price the book-value of the stock is.But in no instance is the name of the communicative philanthropist given.

As long as the earnings continue good and the insiders do not discern any sign of a let up in the company's prosperity they sit on the stock they bought at the low prices.There is nothing to put the price down,so why should they sell?But the moment there is a turn for the worse in the company's business,what happens?Do they come out with statements or warnings or the faintest of hints?Not much.The trend is now downward.Just as they bought without any flourish of trumpets when the company's business turned for the better,they now silently sell.On this inside selling the stock naturally declines.Then the public begins to get the familiar“explanations.”A“leading insider”asserts that everything is O.K.and the decline is merely the result of selling by bears who are trying to affect the general market.If on one fine day,after the stock has been declining for some time,there should be a sharp break,the demand for“reasons”or“explanations”becomes clamorous.Unless somebody says something the public will fear the worst.So the news-tickers now print something like this:“When we asked a prominent director of the company to explain the weakness in the stock,he replied that the only conclusion he could arrive at was that the decline today was caused by a bear drive.Underlying conditions are unchanged.The business of the company was never better than at present and the probabilities are that unless something entirely unforeseen happens in the meanwhile,there will be an increase in the rate at the next dividend meeting.The bear party in the market has become aggressive and the weakness in the stock was clearly a raid intended to dislodge weakly held stock.”The news-tickers,wishing to give good measure,as likely as not will go on to state that they are“reliably informed”that most of the stock bought on the day's decline was taken by inside interests and that the bears will find that they have sold themselves into a trap.There will be a day of reckoning.

In addition to the losses sustained by the public through believing bullish statements and buying stocks,there are the losses that come through being dissuaded from selling out.The next best thing to having people buy the stock the“prominent insider”wishes to sell is to prevent people from selling the same stock when he does not wish to support or accumulate it.What is the public to believe after reading the statement of the“prominent director”?What can the average outsider think?Of course,that the stock should never have gone down;that it was forced down by bear-selling and that as soon as the bears stop the insiders will engineer a punitive advance during which the shorts will be driven to cover at high prices.The public properly believes this because it is exactly what would happen if the decline had in truth been caused by a bear raid.

The stock in question,notwithstanding all the threats or promises of a tremendous squeeze of the over-extended short interest,does not rally.It keeps on going down.It can't help it.There has been too much stock fed to the market from the inside to be digested.

And this inside stock that has been sold by the“prominent directors”and“leading insiders”becomes a football among the professional traders.It keeps on going down.There seems to be no bottom for it.The insiders knowing that trade conditions will adversely affect the company's future earnings do not dare to support that stock until the next turn for the better in the company's business.Then there will be inside buying and inside silence.

I have done my share of trading and have kept fairly well posted on the stock market for many years and I can say that I do not recall an instance when a bear raid caused a stock to decline extensively.What was called bear raiding was nothing but selling based on accurate knowledge of real conditions.But it would not do to say that the stock declined on inside selling or on inside non-buying.Everybody would hasten to sell and when everybody sells and nobody buys there is the dickens to pay.

The public ought to grasp firmly this one point:That the real reason for a protracted decline is never bear raiding.When a stock keeps on going down you can bet there is something wrong with it,either with the market for it or with the company.If the decline were unjustified the stock would soon sell below its real value and that would bring in buying that would check the decline.As a matter of fact,the only time a bear can make big money selling a stock is when that stock is too high.And you can gamble your last cent on the certainty that insiders will not proclaim that fact to the world.

Of course,the classic example is the New Haven.Everybody knows today what only a few knew at the time.The stock sold at 255 in 1902 and was the premier railroad investment of New England.A man in that part of the country measured his respectability and standing in the community by his holdings of it.If somebody had said that the company was on the road to insolvency he would not have been sent to jail for saying it.They would have clapped him in an insane asylum with other lunatics.But when a new and aggressive president was placed in charge by Mr.Morgan and the débacle began,it was not clear from the first that the new policies would land the road where it did.But as property after property began to be saddled in the Consolidated Road at inflated prices,a few clear sighted observers began to doubt the wisdom of the Mellen policies.A trolley system was bought for two million and sold to the New Haven for $10,000,000;whereupon a reckless man or two committed lèse majeste by saying that the management was acting recklessly.Hinting that not even the New Haven could stand such extravagance was like impugning the strength of Gibraltar.

Of course,the first to see breakers ahead were the insiders.They became aware of the real condition of the company and they reduced their holdings of the stock.On their selling as well as on their non-support,the price of New England's gilt-edged railroad stock began to yield.Questions were asked,and explanations were demanded as usual;and the usual explanations were promptly forthcoming.“Prominent insiders”declared that there was nothing wrong that they knew of and that the decline was due to reckless bear selling.So the“investors”of New England kept their holdings of New York,New Haven & Hartford Stock.Why shouldn't they?Didn't insiders say there was nothing wrong and cry bear selling?Didn't dividends continue to be declared and paid?

In the meantime the promised squeeze of the bears did not come but new low records did.The insider selling became more urgent and less disguised.Nevertheless public spirited men in Boston were denounced as stock-jobbers and demagogues for demanding a genuine explanation for the stock's deplorable decline that meant appalling losses to everybody in New England who had wanted a safe investment and a steady dividend payer.

That historic break from $255 to $12 a share never was and never could have been a bear drive.It was not started and it was not kept up by bear operations.The insiders sold right along and always at higher prices than they could have done if they had told the truth or allowed the truth to be told.It did not matter whether the price was 250 or 200 or 150 or 100 or 50 or 25,it still was too high for that stock,and the insiders knew it and the public did not.The public might profitably consider the disadvantages under which it labours when it tries to make money buying and selling the stock of a company concerning whose affairs only a few men are in position to know the whole truth.

The stocks which have had the worst breaks in the past 20 years did not decline on bear raiding.But the easy acceptance of that form of explanation has been responsible for losses by the public amounting to millions upon millions of dollars.It has kept people from selling who did not like the way his stock was acting and would have liquidated if they had not expected the price to go right back after the bears stopped their raiding.I used to hear Keene blamed in the old days.Before him they used to accuse Charley Woerishoffer or Addison Cammack.Later on I became the stock excuse.

I recall the case of Intervale Oil.There was a pool in it that put the stock up and found some buyers on the advance.The manipulators ran the price to 50.There the pool sold and there was a quick break.The usual demand for explanations followed.Why was Intervale so weak?Enough people asked this question to make the answer important news.One of the financial news tickers called up tire brokers who knew the most about Intervale Oil's advance and ought to he equally well posted as to the decline.What did these brokers,members of the bull pool,say when the news agency asked them for a reason that could be printed and sent broadcast over the country?Why,that Larry Livingston was raiding the market!And that wasn't enough.They added that they were going to“get”him.But of course,the Intervale pool continued to sell.The stock only stood then about $12 a share and they could sell it down to 10 or lower and their average selling price would still be above cost.

It was wise and proper for insiders to sell on the decline.But for outsiders who had paid 35 or 40,it was a different matter.Reading what the tickers printed there outsiders held on and waited for Larry Livingston to get what was coming to him at the hands of the indignant inside pool.

In a bull market and particularly in booms the public at first makes money which it later loses simply by overstaying the bull market.This talk of“bear raids”helps them to overstay.The public should beware of explanations that explain only what unnamed insiders wish the public to believe.

股票投机生意是永远不会消失的,人们也不希望它消失,那些关于投机有多危险的劝诫也不可能阻止投机。无论人们能力多强,或者有多么丰富的经验,都不可能不出错。那些意料不到和没办法预估的事情总会发生,导致你小心翼翼做的计划最终失败。厄运可能来自天灾或气候,可能来自人的贪欲或虚荣,也可能来自恐惧或对希望的不可遏制。可是,除了那些被叫作天敌的东西外,股票投机商们必须要与一些做法对抗,或者要能解决在正常情况下和商业土壤中不可以立足的恶行。

回想25年前我刚到华尔街那些司空见惯的行为时,必须要承认,很多东西已经好多了。旧的那种交易场所已经被淘汰,可是存在欺诈行为的交易所却还是生意很红火,残害着那些致力于一夜暴富的男女们。证券交易所做得非常好,不光查处了那些骗子,也始终要求会员公司严格遵守规则,实施了很多健全的法律法规,不过还是存在值得改进的地方,也存在一些恶行,这是由华尔街长期培植的保守习惯导致的,而不是源于人们道德上的麻木。

股票投机商赚钱历来都是很难的事,如今更是难上加难。不久前,真正的交易商们在每只股票上差不多都有操作的知识。1901年,摩根公司在纽交所推出了由一些小型联合公司组成的美国钢铁公司股票,那时只有275只股票挂牌,没上市的大概100只,里面有很多股价没必要知晓,因为都是微小股、次要股或保证股,没有活跃的交易,所以也就没有多少人愿意投入。实际上在一年中,大多数股票连一次都没交易过。而今天,正常的挂牌股票就有900只,最近交易活跃的大概是600只。而且,原来的股票容易按类股分类跟踪,当时的类股很少,资本额又不大。股民们需要知道的消息,也没有多大的涵盖面。可今天你却能够对每一只股票进行交易,全球的哪个行业都有股票上市。只有花费更多时间和精力,才能使自己的消息灵通。光这一点对聪明的股民们来说就已经知道投机比原来艰难了很多。

做股票交易生意的人成千上万,可真正获得利润的却很少。从某种程度上来看,人们总徘徊在股市中,常常受到损失。缺乏知识、贪欲太盛、担心过大和希望太强,都是股票投机人的致命弱点。世界上所有的法令和证交所的规则都不能把它们从人的本性中赶跑。出乎意料的事会击碎认真做过的计划,头脑清晰的经济学家和乐善好施的慈善家都没办法制止那样的事。另一种导致亏损的来源,是那些故意提供误导的不同于直接内幕消息的信息造成的。这样的信息往往包裹在不同的伪装里,在股民们中间传播,这是更阴森、更危险的敌人。

普通的外部人士自然要凭借口头或文字性的、直接的或间接的内幕消息来交易。你无法抗拒正常的内幕消息,比如与你一直要好的朋友很真诚地想帮你赚钱,所以对你说了他做的事情,买卖了什么股票。他怀着好心,可要是消息有误,你怎么办?而且,在专业人士或者骗子们传播消息这方面,股民们受到的保护,与他在面临假钱和假酒侵害上受到的保护差不多。可是,在与纯种的华尔街谣言对抗方面,投机人没有得到任何保护和补偿。很多从事证券销售的商人、作手、内线或者个人,以不同形式与方法,帮股民按最理想的价格交易股票。报纸和股市行情传出来的有关多头市场的报道都是很致命的。

随便拿哪天的报纸财经版看,都会惊奇地看到它刊登着一些暗示是来自半官方的声明,都是“重要内线”“知名董事”“公司高管”“权威人士”等所提供的消息。人们都觉得他们说得很有道理。下面是今天的报道,我随便选了一个:“银行界领袖说,现在说空头市场会出现还为时尚早,不能断言。”

说话的真是一位银行领袖?他为什么这么说?又为什么不报出姓名?是不是怕报出姓名后大家不相信?

还有一条与这周股票交易比较活跃的一家公司有关的消息,是一位“知名董事”所说。好吧,要真有这么一个人,那么他是这家公司那么多董事中的哪一个?诚然,不署名的爆料即便出错为别人带来了损失,也没办法责怪。

股票交易人要很明智地研究各地的交易市场,还要考虑与炒股游戏相关的事情;要想办法搞清楚怎么赚钱和怎么才不会亏损,要明白什么该做、什么不该做也非常重要。所以,你最好记清楚,一种炒作差不多会出现在个股的任何涨势中,这是内线们发起的涨势,就是为了能卖出赚钱的股票。可普通的交易公司的顾客们觉得,如果顽固地去挖掘一只股票上涨的原因,就是个刨根究底的聪明人。作手们肯定会按照特意布置的有利于卖出股票的手段来解释涨势。我坚定地觉得,如果主管部门不让报纸刊发不报姓名的利多言论,那股民们赔的钱就会少很多。我说的是那种特别策划的引导人们交易股票的言论。

利用不报姓名的董事和内线人士言论的大多数报道,向人们传达的都是不值得信赖的信息。股民们觉得消息性质是半官方的,就有必要相信,因此每年都会赔掉成百上千万美元。

比如说,某家公司的某项业务在某段时间比较疲软,公司股票很不受人待见。它在普通股民们心中的价值表现就是股价,而且可能是真实的价值。假如这个价位的股价便宜,就会有人知道这一点,接着去买进,股价就涨高;假如这个价位的股价贵,有人知道后就会卖,股价也就下跌。不存在这两种情况的话,人们就不会议论它,不会对它采取行动。

是谁最早知道公司业务有了好转?公司内部人士还是普通股民?肯定不是普通股民。然后会出现什么事?假如一直处于好转状态,盈余就会增多,公司就有恢复配股息的机会,如果一直不断裂,股利率就会提高。也就是说,股票的价值会变高。

如果情况持续好转的话,经营者会不会对外讲这个让人开心的事情?总裁会对股东们说吗?哪位好心的董事会有名有姓地告诉看报纸的读者们吗?那些谦虚的内线们会跟往常一样不报姓名地说公司的前景非常好吗?不会!没人会说,报纸和股票报价机器上都不会有任何信息。

他们会小心谨慎地阻止这类股票增值的消息传播,那些不怎么说话的著名内线会在股市中尽力获取能买到的所有贱股。这样的状况在持续的时候,股价就会上涨。财经版的读者们清楚,内线们知道股价为什么上涨,所以会去问。都不愿意透露姓名的内线人士会统一口径地说,他们没什么可透露,不知道为什么上涨。他们有时还会说自己并不太重视股市的奇怪行情,不重视股票投机者们的所作所为。

股价上涨到了让人们兴奋的时候,了解内情的人也买够了他们想买进或有能力买进的股票,华尔街上就会再次出现各种利多的传言。“按照权威人士透露的消息”,电报机会把公司的确由逆境转到顺境状态的消息让股民们知道。一位谦虚谨慎的董事以前会说,他不知道股票上涨的原因,而此时他的话却在人们口中被引述出来:股东们有对公司未来非常看好的充足理由。当然了,他还是没有透露姓名。

股民们受到洪水般的利好消息的蛊惑,开始购买那只股票,这就会使股价更高。时机成熟后,全部不愿意透露姓名的董事们的预测就很准啊,公司恢复了股利分配,甚至可能增加股利。如此消息弥散后,利多的消息铺天盖地,数量大增,传播消息的人也变得热情。当人们请某个重要董事直接讲明情形时,他会告诉全世界,好转现象不只是能持续而已;某位重要内线架不住人们的请求,最终在报社怂恿下,说公司盈余非常之高;某个与公司关系紧密的著名银行家也在别人请求下说,股票销售量增多,简直创造了这个行业的交易历史,在没有其他订单的前提下,公司日夜不停歇地运转,还不知道需要多少个月才能完成目前手里的业务量;某个财政委员会成员的表述在报纸上通过特殊处理后会变成,他很惊讶人们怎么会对这只股票上涨颇感意外。让人震惊的唯一现象是,股价上涨的速度慢了下来。不管谁去对公司将发出的年报进行分析,都能随便看出来,这只股票净值要远高于市场价。不过,那些善于与人们沟通的好心人不管在哪种情况下,都是不愿意透露姓名的。

公司内线人士只要看到盈余还在增长,没出现公司运气要减弱的表现,他们就会牢牢地握住低价回购的股票。没有什么让股价降低,他们凭什么要卖?不过,公司业务变得很差劲的时候,你看会出现什么情况?他们会发出声明、警告或一点儿小暗示吗?不可能。正如当时公司业务好的时候,他们没有大张旗鼓地买进股票一样,此时公司业务走下坡路了,他们必定也在偷偷地卖出。公司内线的卖出导致股价下跌,股民们紧接着就听到了一些熟悉的说法。一个重要内线人士咬紧牙说什么都很通畅,出现的小下跌是一些空头在掼压这只股票,想对整个股市施加些影响而已。如果某个时候,经过一阵下跌后的股价出现暴跌的情况,那么就会有更多的声音要求说明原因,给出解释。只要有人解释清楚就好,不然人们就会非常担心出现那种最可怕的情况。所以,如今新闻媒体的印刷机上正在印着这些报道:“当我们要求公司的一位重要董事解释清楚,为什么股价会这么糟糕时,他说导致今天股价下跌的唯一原因,就是那些空头在掼压。不过大趋势还没有发生变化,公司现在业务非常繁忙。而且,下次开会时,非常有可能会讨论提高股利分配比率的问题,除非出现预料之外的突发情况。市场空头们太猖狂了,股价不景气是他们掼压的结果,他们就是为了卖掉手里不好的股票。”新闻媒体为了让新闻更权威,可能还会补充写道,他们获悉了可靠消息,完全是由公司内线人士在股价下跌的这一天吃进了大多数股票,而那些空头会明白自作孽不可活,自己陷入了自己挖的陷阱,迟早会付出代价。

股民们对那些利多说法信以为真,买了好多股票,结果赔了钱,除此之外也有人因为受别人蛊惑,放弃了卖出而赔钱。防止人们卖那些重要内线们不想支持或不想买进的同一只股,是除了让人们买进他们想卖出的那只股票外第二好的办法。股民们看到重要董事的说法后,会相信什么?自然是相信这只股肯定不会下跌,而是空头掼压的表现,一旦空头停止卖出,内线们就会大反攻,对空头们施以惩戒,到那时空头们必须要用更多的钱来回补。人们绝对对这个观点信心十足,如果股票下跌确实是空头们掼压的结果,那么后续发展也就会如他们所想。

这只股票的价格并没有反弹。虽然出现了很多威胁和承诺,说要轧死那些放肆的空头,可股价还在下跌。怎么可能不跌,公司内线人士把那么多股票卖了出去,市场根本消化不过来。而且,重要董事和内线人士卖向市场的那一批股票,被专业的交易商们来回踢皮球。股价持续下跌,好像没有到头的时候。公司内线们清楚,业务情况对公司以后的盈余有严重的影响,因此在公司业务情况再次出现好转之前,没胆量再支撑股票了。等到有所好转时,内线们又会一点儿都不对外张扬,悄悄买进。

我做交易很多年,对市场消息非常灵通。我可以这么说,没有哪次的股价大跌是空头掼压的结果。通常意义上的掼压,实际上只是精确掌握了实际情况后卖掉股票而已。可如果说是内线不支持或者卖出股票而导致了股价下跌,却也行不通,这样的话,谁都要赶紧卖出股票,没有人买进,情况就会变得惨不忍睹。

人们应该牢记,股价持续下跌,真实的原因并非空头掼压的结果。当一只股票一直下跌,你就能确定里面必定出什么事了,不是因为市场,就是因为公司内部。假如下跌是没什么原因的,那么等股价下跌到真正的价值以下,就会有人购买,跌势也会被拉止。其实,只有当股价特别高时,空头在卖出时才能赚很大利润。你可以用你的最后那份钱做赌,内线人士必定不会对外宣布这个真实情况。

纽海文铁路公司就是其中的代表性事例。今天所有人都知道,可在当时却只有极少的人了解。1902年,他们的股票价格达到了255美元,在新英格兰地区,是数一数二的铁路投资标靶。东北部的人就是根据是不是持有这只股票,来判断某人在社区里有多么受尊敬,或者有多大威信。如果有人说这家公司很快要倒闭,是不会被抓进监狱的,可他会被当成疯子一样,关进精神病院。可是,当摩根任命了一位闯劲十足的新总裁后,悲惨的情况开始了。起初,人们并没想到新的政策会把公司拉到最终那个地步。但是,当资金一次次地以浮夸价投入进去后,有些高瞻远瞩的观察家们就开始对此提出了质疑。按照200万买进的一套电车系统,一转手就可以按照1000万卖给纽海文铁路公司。此时,公司委员会里会有一两个不计后果的成员,对管理层的莽撞行事表示不齿,犯了不尊敬上级的罪过。他们的意思是,即便是纽海文这样有实力的公司,也不能胡乱挥霍。这些话脆弱渺小,起不了任何作用,就像你想要向直布罗陀海峡里的礁石发出挑战一般。

首先看出灾难迹象的肯定是公司内线人士,他们对公司的真实情况逐步进行掌握,然后卖出持股。经过他们的卖出,在新英格兰地区非常贵气而富有的纽海文铁路股票开始掉价。人们如像以往那般质疑,要求给予解释,而解释也如以往那般果真出现了。有重要内线放话说,他们不知道哪里有问题,股价下跌是因为愣头青的空头在掼压。因此,在新英格兰地区的所谓投资者们继续把他们的纽约、纽海文和哈特弗铁路公司的股票握在手里。是啊,他们有什么理由不继续握着呢?内线人士都说了是空头在放空,没什么问题嘛,公司不也还在说要发放红利吗?

原本公司董事承诺出现的轧空也没实现,出现的只是更低的股价记录。内线人士制造的卖压更加紧张了,也逐渐摆在了明面上。波士顿的那些具备公益素养的人,以及代表民意的出头人向发行方提出要求,让他们对这样的境况做出解释,到底是什么原因使得新英格兰地区那些本想稳当赚点儿钱的所有人,都蒙受了特大的损失,但他们却被指责为股票投机分子。

这只股票从255美元暴跌到了12美元,这绝不是、也不可能是空头掼压造成的。空头没有引发股票下跌,也不是他们造成了跌势无法停止。公司的内线人士一直在卖,抛售价要高于他们说明真实情况或者允许真实情况被人们知道时候的价格。无论股价是250美元、200美元、150美元,还是100美元,甚至50美元、25美元,对这只股票而言都属于高价,内线们很清楚,只是股民们不知道。如果股民们想通过交易某家公司的股票来赚钱,而事先就知道这家公司的业务状况只有一少部分人才能有办法完全了解,那可能会对他有利。

在过去的20年里,出现过的跌势最严重的股票,下跌原因都不是空头掼压造成的,而人们那么容易就接受这样的理由,正是他们亏损成百上千万的原因。那样的说法,让不喜欢这种股价变动态势的人没有出售股票,他们把希望寄托在空头停止掼压后的股价反弹上,不然也可能卖掉股票。我以前听到过别人抱怨凯恩,更早之前,人们习惯于骂查理·伍利雪弗和爱迪生·卡马克,而后来,我自己也成了股市的代罪羊。

我记得有关山谷石油公司的那件事情。这家公司的股票是被公司内线集团操控的,他们拉抬股价,也找到了在上涨的时候买进的股民。这些作手们把股价炒到了50美元,然后卖出手中的股票,股价就暴跌了。然后,人们一如既往地求解释,山谷石油股票为什么这么羸弱?有大量提问的人,对问题的回答也就成了新闻。一家财经媒体去采访最了解山谷石油公司股票上涨内幕消息的一个经纪商,作为炒作集团成员的他,对股票为什么下跌也一样清楚。报纸请他说一个可以向全国范围内刊登报道的原因。哦,那当然是拉里·利文斯顿打压股市引发的啦。除此之外,他还补上一句,说要准备收拾我。可山谷石油公司内线人士依然在出售,当时股价大概12美元,他们甚至可以卖到10美元以下,平均卖价还是要高于他们的成本。

公司内线把价格拉低后卖出股票是精明的做法,也做得恰到好处,而对那些花费了35美元或40美元的不知道内情的外人而言就不一样了。他们读到印刷机印出来的报纸报道后,就紧抱着股票不放手,还等着看利文斯顿被内线集团抓住后狠狠地修理一番呢。

在牛市里,特别是盛况空前的高潮期,人们最早都获得了利润,可后来都赔了本,完全是因为他们对牛市太不舍了。广大的股民要提防那种只解释不愿意透露姓名的内线人士希望股民相信的解释。

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