Thursday, October 30, 2008

A TALE OF TWO GIANTS: JESSIE LIVERMORE AND WARREN BUFFET

By Salve
10/30/08
Posted under Investing

Yesterday’s “Pesos and Sense” seminar at the Makati Sports Club was, in my opinion, very successful and extremely interesting. Speakers Chinkee Tan, Randell Tiongson and Francis Kong drew up a crowd and not only talked about dealing with debt, investing and saving, but also kept money issues in perspective. One of the seminar participants even flew in from Cebu, fly-in-fly-out style.

Randell Tiongson, president and chief operating officer of Personal Finance Advisers Phils. Corp., made a very interesting comparison between two giants in the world of finance: Jesse Livermore and Warren Buffett.

Jesse Livermore was a master of the art of speculation. He was first and foremost a trader and a technician who preached never to “fight the tape.” One of his rules was to cut your losses when your losses reach 10%.

He was famous for shorting the market during two crises and earning tons of money. First during 1907 when he bagged $3 million (guess how much that’s worth today!), and the second time in the 1929 crash when he made $100 million. He lost both fortunes after the market crashes.

Livermore lived in luxury—houses around the world, yachts, limousines and he could also be called “Lovermore” with five marriages. He died at 62 when he walked into a New York hotel room and shot himself.

Warren Buffett can be described as an investor, and not a trader. He doesn’t like Wall Street and says that openly. He doesn’t buy stocks; he buys businesses and holds on to them for the long-term. He doesn’t care about the economy. He likes businesses that survive despite economic downturns. Now at 72, he is the world’s richest man and gave away bulk of his money to charity a few years ago.

Buffett has a grandfatherly air, drives his own car and picks up his own guests at the airport. He owns five houses but still lives in his first home in Omaha and his car tag says “Thrifty.” I am currently reading the only book about him that he authorized: The Snowball: Warren Buffett and The Business Of Life and so far, it has been an intensely interesting read.

There is no question which one most people would like to be. And yet, why do most people who love Warren sometimes end up doing a Livermore?

Source/Link:http://blogs.inquirer.net/moneysmarts

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