Book Review: Market Wizards
Asif Suria
Founder and CEO at Inside Arbitrage. Author of The Event-Driven Edge in Investing.
Editor’s Note: This is the 12th book review we are publishing as part of our Get Paid to Read contest. Last week, I wrote a review of a book I immensely enjoyed listening to as an audiobook, “Richer, Wiser, Happier“ by William Green .
You can explore the rest of the reviews we’ve published in the Reading List section here.
This week, Peter Obermeyer reviews Market Wizards by Jack D. Schwager. ?Peter is a portfolio manager for a family office based in Montana and a graduate of the University of Oregon. Go ducks!
Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager sat unopened on my bookshelf from the time I started working in investment management.? I am grateful to Asif and InsideArbitrage for the nudge to finally pick it up.
Peruse most lists of classic books about the industry and one is likely to find this title.? Given the current abundance of blogs and podcasts, many of which feature today’s top investors, it is easy to overlook the unique and valuable contribution Schwager made by sitting down with people possessing exceptional investment track records and attempting to extract the disciplines that enabled their high performance.? It was a welcome change to read interviews that did not pertain to the current market environment, as it is easy to become distracted by today’s events and miss the timeless principles of money management explored in these conversations.
Format
The book contains five sections, four of which are composed of interviews with traders organized by the markets in which they are involved: currencies and futures, mostly stocks, a little bit of everything, and pit trading.? The final section in the edition I read (2012) pertains to the psychology of trading based on an interview with Dr. Van K. Tharp.
领英推荐
The interviews vary widely in length, and Schwager provides a several page summary of his key takeaways at the end of each chapter.? Each conversation was valuable in its own way, but I found the interviews with Bruce Kovner, Paul Tudor Jones, Ed Seykota, Michael Steinhardt, and William O’Neil particularly rich.
Key Themes
While there was a great deal of variation among the traders’ strategies, several themes came up repeatedly that I believe are worth flagging.
Criticisms
In my opinion, the book’s strength lies in the diverse and engaging presentation of the key themes above.? Learning these lessons through the tales of great traders was enjoyable, and will hopefully discount the tuition one pays to the market in the form of unforced errors.
Check out Peter's full review on InsideArbitrage here: