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Jesse Livermore

Jesse Lauriston Livermore (July 26, 1877 – November 28, 1940) was an American stock trader.[1] He is considered a pioneer of day trading[2] and was the basis for the main character of Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, a best-selling book by Edwin Lefèvre. At one time, Livermore was one of the richest people in the world; however, at the time of his suicide, he had liabilities greater than his assets.[3]

Jesse Livermore
Born
Jesse Lauriston Livermore

(1877-07-26)July 26, 1877
DiedNovember 28, 1940(1940-11-28) (aged 63)
New York City, U.S.
Cause of deathSuicide by gunshot
Other namesBoy Plunger
The Wolf of Wall Street
The Great Bear of Wall Street
OccupationStock trader
Spouses
Nettie Jordan
(m. 1900; div. 1917)
Dorothea "Dorothy" Wendt
(m. 1918; div. 1932)
Harriet Metz Noble
(m. 1933)
Children2

In a time when accurate financial statements were rarely published, getting current stock quotes required a large operation, and market manipulation was rampant, Livermore used what is now known as technical analysis as the basis for his trades. His principles, including the effects of emotion on trading, continue to be studied.

Some of Livermore's trades, such as taking short positions before the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and just before the Wall Street Crash of 1929, are legendary within investing circles. Some observers have regarded Livermore as the greatest trader who ever lived, but others have regarded his legacy as a cautionary tale about the risks of leverage to seek large gains rather than a strategy focused on smaller yet more consistent returns.[4]

Early life edit

Livermore was born in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, to a poverty-stricken family and moved to Acton, Massachusetts, as a child.[5] Livermore learned to read and write at the age of three-and-a-half.[6] At the age of 14, his father pulled him out of school to help with the farm; however, with his mother's blessing, Livermore ran away from home.[6]

Career edit

In 1891, at the age of 14, he secured employment, as a board boy, posting stock quotes at a Boston, Massachusetts, branch of the PaineWebber stock brokerage, at the rate of $5 per week. He made his first trade when he bought five shares of Burlington for $5.[7]

In 1892, at the age of 15, he bet $5 on Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad at a bucket shop, a type of establishment that took leveraged bets on stock prices but did not buy or sell the stock.[1] He earned $3.12 on the $5 bet.[6]

From 1893 to 1894, age 16–17, Livermore, nicknamed "The Boy Plunger", was earning about $200 per week, trading at the bucket shops in Boston, much more than his salary at Paine Webber.[8] At the age of 16, he quit his job and began trading full-time. He brought $1,000 home to his mother, who disapproved of his "gambling"; he countered that he was not gambling, but "speculating".[9]

From 1895–1897, age 18–20, he accumulated $10,000 trading profits, a 1,000 per cent net return in three years of trading. However, he was eventually barred by most Boston area bucket shops, because of his consistent winning. Using disguises and false names to trade only prolonged the inevitable city-wide ban.[8]

From 1898–1900, age 21–22, he continued trading with Haight & Freese, the last Boston area bucket shop which had not banned him. However, Haight & Freese gradually widened the bid-ask spread and imposed restrictive margin requirements which made it much more difficult and risky for Livermore to make money.[8]

On September 14, 1900, age 23, he moved to New York, arriving in time for a strong bull market in stocks. He traded successfully, on the long side, at Harris, Hutton & Company stockbrokers, turning $10,000 into $50,000 in five days. In May 1901, he anticipated a correction and went short, using 400% margin. He lost his entire stake, as the ticker tape was not updated fast enough to make current trading decisions. He borrowed $2,000 from Ed Hutton and moved to St. Louis, where he was not known, and went back to betting at bucket shops.[6]

His first big win came in 1901 at the age of 24 when he bought stock in Northern Pacific Railway. He turned $10,000 into $500,000.[6]

In 1906, he vacationed in Palm Beach, Florida, at the club of Edward R. Bradley.[6] While on vacation, at the direction of Thomas W. Lawson, he took a massive short position in Union Pacific Railroad the day before the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, leading to a $250,000 profit.[10] Some time later, Livermore went long on the stock; however, his friend, and owner of the brokerage house in which he did most of his trading, Edward Francis Hutton, erroneously convinced Livermore to close his position, and he wound up losing $40,000.[6]

In the Panic of 1907, Livermore's huge short positions made him $1 million in a single day.[6] However, his mentor, J. P. Morgan, who had bailed out the entire New York Stock Exchange during the crash, requested him to refrain from further short selling. Livermore agreed and instead, profited from the rebound, boosting his net worth to $3 million.[6]

He bought a $200,000 yacht, a rail car, and an apartment on the Upper West Side. He joined exclusive clubs and had mistresses.[6]

In 1908, he listened to advice from cotton trader Theodore H. "Teddy" Price, who told him to buy cotton, while Price secretly sold. He went bankrupt but was able to recover all of his losses.[6]

In 1915, he filed bankruptcy again.[11]

Following the end of World War I, Livermore secretly cornered the market in cotton. It was only interception by President Woodrow Wilson, prompted by a call from the United States Secretary of Agriculture, who asked him to the White House for a discussion that stopped his move. He agreed to sell back the cotton at break-even, thus preventing a troublesome rise in the price of cotton. When asked why he had cornered the cotton market, Livermore replied, "To see if I could, Mr. President."[12]

In 1924–1925, he engaged in market manipulation, making $10 million trading wheat and corn in a battle with Arthur W. Cutten[6] and engineering a short squeeze on the stock of Piggly Wiggly.[9]

In early 1929, he amassed huge short positions, using more than 100 stockbrokers to hide what he was doing. By the spring, he was down over $6 million on paper. However, upon the Wall Street Crash of 1929, he netted approximately $100 million.[6] Following a series of newspaper articles declaring him the "Great Bear of Wall Street", he was blamed for the crash by the public and received death threats, leading him to hire an armed bodyguard.[9]

His second divorce in 1932, the non-fatal shooting of his son by his wife in 1935, and a lawsuit from his Russian mistress led to a decline in his mental health, while the creation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in 1934 imposed new rules that affected his trading. Although it is unknown exactly how it happened,[12] he eventually lost his fortune and filed bankruptcy for the third time in 1934, listing assets of $84,000 and debts of $2.5 million.[9][6] He was suspended as a member of the Chicago Board of Trade on March 7, 1934.[12]

In 1937, he paid off his $800,000 tax bill.[13]

In 1939, he opened a financial advisory business, selling a technical analysis system.[9]

Personal life edit

One of Livermore's favorite books was Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, by Charles Mackay, first published in 1841. That was also a favorite book of Bernard Baruch, a stock trader and close friend of Livermore.[5]

He enjoyed fishing and, in 1937, he caught a 486-pound swordfish.[14]

Marriages edit

Livermore was married three times and had two children. He married his first wife, Netit (Nettie) Jordan, of Indianapolis, at the age of 23 in October 1900. They had only known each other a few weeks before they got married.[6] Less than a year later, he went broke after some bad trades. For a new stake, he asked her to pawn the substantial collection of jewelry he had bought her, but she refused, permanently damaging their relationship.[6] They separated soon thereafter, but Livermore funded the defense of his brother-in-law, Chester S. Jordan, who was charged with murdering his wife.[12][15] They finally divorced in October 1917.[12]

On December 2, 1918, at the age of 40, Livermore married 22–23-year-old Dorothea (Dorothy) Fox Wendt, a former Ziegfeld girl in Ziegfeld Follies.[12] Livermore had affairs with several of the dancers.[6] The couple had two sons: Jesse Livermore II, born in 1919 and Paul, born in 1922.[6] He then bought an expensive house in Great Neck and let his wife spend as much as she wanted on the furnishings.[6] In 1927, he and his wife were robbed at gunpoint in their home.[6] The relationship became strained by Dorothy's drinking habits, Livermore's affairs with other Ziegfeld girls, and their lavish spending.[6] In 1931, Dorothy Livermore filed for divorce and took up temporary residence in Reno, Nevada, with her new lover, James Walter Longcope. On September 16, 1932, the divorce was granted and she immediately married her boyfriend. She retained custody of their two sons and received a $10 million settlement.[6] Dorothy sold the house in Great Neck, on which Livermore spent $3.5 million, for $222,000. The house was then torn down, depressing Livermore.[6]

On March 28, 1933, Livermore, now 56, married 38-year-old singer and socialite Harriet Metz Noble in Geneva, Illinois. They had met in 1931 in Vienna, where Metz Noble was performing and Livermore was in the audience on vacation. Metz Noble was from a prominent Omaha family that had made a fortune in the Metz Brewery Company. Livermore was Metz Noble's fifth husband; at least two of Metz's previous husbands had committed suicide, including Warren Noble, who hanged himself after the Wall Street Crash of 1929.[16][6]

Publications edit

In late 1939, Livermore's son, Jesse Jr., suggested to his father that he write a book about trading. The book, How to Trade in Stocks, was published by Duell, Sloan and Pearce in March 1940. The book did not sell well as World War II was underway and the general interest in the stock market was low. His investment methods were controversial at the time, and the book received mixed reviews upon publication.[12]

Death edit

On Thanksgiving day, November 28, 1940, just after 5:30 pm, Livermore fatally shot himself with an Automatic Colt Pistol in the cloakroom of The Sherry-Netherland hotel in Manhattan, where he usually had cocktails. Police found a suicide note of eight small handwritten pages in Livermore's personal, leather-bound notebook.[10][17] The note was addressed to Livermore's wife, Harriet (whom Livermore nicknamed "Nina") and it read, "My dear Nina: Can't help it. Things have been bad with me. I am tired of fighting. Can't carry on any longer. This is the only way out. I am unworthy of your love. I am a failure. I am truly sorry, but this is the only way out for me. Love Laurie".[12]

Further reading edit

Books about Livermore include:

  • 1923 – Reminiscences of a Stock Operator, by Edwin Lefèvre. A best-selling semi-fictionalized biography of Livermore though his identity is veiled in the book. Multiple reissues since, the latest issued on January 17, 2006, with a foreword by Roger Lowenstein (ISBN 0-471-77088-4 ISBN 978-0-471-77088-6) – PDF
  • 1985 – Jesse Livermore – Speculator King, by Paul Sarnoff (ISBN 0-934380-10-4)
  • 2001 – Jesse Livermore: The World's Greatest Stock Trader by Richard Smitten (ISBN 0-471-02326-4)
  • 2003 – Speculation as a Fine Art, by Dickson G. Watts (ISBN 0-87034-056-5) – PDF
  • 2004 – Trade Like Jesse Livermore, by Richard Smitten (ISBN 0-471-65585-6) – PDF
  • 2004 – Lessons from the Greatest Stock Traders of All Time, by John Boik
  • 2006 – How Legendary Traders Made Millions, by John Boik
  • 2007 – The Secret of Livermore: Analyzing the Market Key System, by Andras Nagy (ISBN 978-0-9753093-7-7)
  • 2014 – Jesse Livermore - Boy Plunger, by Tom Rubython, Foreword by Paul Tudor-Jones (ISBN 978-0-9570605-7-9)

References edit

  1. ^ a b Lefèvre, Edwin (1923). Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. Harriman House Limited. ISBN 9780857190567.
  2. ^ Millman, Gregory J. "The Original Day Trader". Forbes. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  3. ^ Abbott, Robert (June 18, 2019). "Big Mistakes: Jesse Livermore". GuruFocus.
  4. ^ Kenneth Fisher. 100 Minds That Made the Market. ISBN 978-0470139516. Wiley, 2007
  5. ^ a b Smitten, Richard (November 11, 2004). Trade Like Jesse Livermore. Wiley. ISBN 0-471-65585-6.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Shen, Lucinda (July 17, 2015). "Why Wall Street traders are obsessed with Jesse Livermore". Business Insider.
  7. ^ Rubython, Tom (2015). Jesse Livermore – Boy Plunger. Bere Regis, United Kingdom: The Myrtle Press. p. 382. ISBN 978-0-9906199-1-8.
  8. ^ a b c Rubython, Tom (2015). Jesse Livermore – Boy Plunger. Bere Regis, United Kingdom: The Myrtle Press. p. 382. ISBN 978-0-9906199-1-8.
  9. ^ a b c d e Millman, Gregory J. (December 27, 1999). "The Original Day Trader". Forbes.
  10. ^ a b Henriques, Diana B. (September 9, 2001). "Off the Shelf; A Speculator's Life Is Still Elusive". The New York Times.
  11. ^ "Cotton 'King' A Bankrupt; Jesse L. Livermore Loses Millions He Made in Wall Street". The New York Times. February 18, 1915.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Smitten, Richard (September 14, 2001). Jesse Livermore: The World's Greatest Stock Trader. Wiley. ISBN 0-934380-75-9.
  13. ^ "Livermore Pays Up His $800,000 Tax Bill; Speculator's Attorney Silent on Possible Plans for Another 'Come-Back'". The New York Times. April 1, 1937.
  14. ^ "70 Yachts Moored Off Montauk Club; Jesse Livermore Brings Ashore There 486-Pound Swordfish, Almost a Club Record". The New York Times. July 6, 1937.
  15. ^ "Wife Slayer Aided by Cotton Plunger". The New York Times. September 5, 1908.
  16. ^ Hansen, Matthew (October 27, 2015). "Hansen: Tale of Omaha's 'black widow' is too tempting to not investigate". Omaha World-Herald.
  17. ^ "Business: Boy Plunger". Time. December 9, 1940.

jesse, livermore, jesse, lauriston, livermore, july, 1877, november, 1940, american, stock, trader, considered, pioneer, trading, basis, main, character, reminiscences, stock, operator, best, selling, book, edwin, lefèvre, time, livermore, richest, people, wor. Jesse Lauriston Livermore July 26 1877 November 28 1940 was an American stock trader 1 He is considered a pioneer of day trading 2 and was the basis for the main character of Reminiscences of a Stock Operator a best selling book by Edwin Lefevre At one time Livermore was one of the richest people in the world however at the time of his suicide he had liabilities greater than his assets 3 Jesse LivermoreBornJesse Lauriston Livermore 1877 07 26 July 26 1877Shrewsbury Massachusetts U S DiedNovember 28 1940 1940 11 28 aged 63 New York City U S Cause of deathSuicide by gunshotOther namesBoy PlungerThe Wolf of Wall Street The Great Bear of Wall StreetOccupationStock traderSpousesNettie Jordan m 1900 div 1917 wbr Dorothea Dorothy Wendt m 1918 div 1932 wbr Harriet Metz Noble m 1933 wbr Children2In a time when accurate financial statements were rarely published getting current stock quotes required a large operation and market manipulation was rampant Livermore used what is now known as technical analysis as the basis for his trades His principles including the effects of emotion on trading continue to be studied Some of Livermore s trades such as taking short positions before the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and just before the Wall Street Crash of 1929 are legendary within investing circles Some observers have regarded Livermore as the greatest trader who ever lived but others have regarded his legacy as a cautionary tale about the risks of leverage to seek large gains rather than a strategy focused on smaller yet more consistent returns 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 3 1 Marriages 4 Publications 5 Death 6 Further reading 7 ReferencesEarly life editLivermore was born in Shrewsbury Massachusetts to a poverty stricken family and moved to Acton Massachusetts as a child 5 Livermore learned to read and write at the age of three and a half 6 At the age of 14 his father pulled him out of school to help with the farm however with his mother s blessing Livermore ran away from home 6 Career editIn 1891 at the age of 14 he secured employment as a board boy posting stock quotes at a Boston Massachusetts branch of the PaineWebber stock brokerage at the rate of 5 per week He made his first trade when he bought five shares of Burlington for 5 7 In 1892 at the age of 15 he bet 5 on Chicago Burlington and Quincy Railroad at a bucket shop a type of establishment that took leveraged bets on stock prices but did not buy or sell the stock 1 He earned 3 12 on the 5 bet 6 From 1893 to 1894 age 16 17 Livermore nicknamed The Boy Plunger was earning about 200 per week trading at the bucket shops in Boston much more than his salary at Paine Webber 8 At the age of 16 he quit his job and began trading full time He brought 1 000 home to his mother who disapproved of his gambling he countered that he was not gambling but speculating 9 From 1895 1897 age 18 20 he accumulated 10 000 trading profits a 1 000 per cent net return in three years of trading However he was eventually barred by most Boston area bucket shops because of his consistent winning Using disguises and false names to trade only prolonged the inevitable city wide ban 8 From 1898 1900 age 21 22 he continued trading with Haight amp Freese the last Boston area bucket shop which had not banned him However Haight amp Freese gradually widened the bid ask spread and imposed restrictive margin requirements which made it much more difficult and risky for Livermore to make money 8 On September 14 1900 age 23 he moved to New York arriving in time for a strong bull market in stocks He traded successfully on the long side at Harris Hutton amp Company stockbrokers turning 10 000 into 50 000 in five days In May 1901 he anticipated a correction and went short using 400 margin He lost his entire stake as the ticker tape was not updated fast enough to make current trading decisions He borrowed 2 000 from Ed Hutton and moved to St Louis where he was not known and went back to betting at bucket shops 6 His first big win came in 1901 at the age of 24 when he bought stock in Northern Pacific Railway He turned 10 000 into 500 000 6 In 1906 he vacationed in Palm Beach Florida at the club of Edward R Bradley 6 While on vacation at the direction of Thomas W Lawson he took a massive short position in Union Pacific Railroad the day before the 1906 San Francisco earthquake leading to a 250 000 profit 10 Some time later Livermore went long on the stock however his friend and owner of the brokerage house in which he did most of his trading Edward Francis Hutton erroneously convinced Livermore to close his position and he wound up losing 40 000 6 In the Panic of 1907 Livermore s huge short positions made him 1 million in a single day 6 However his mentor J P Morgan who had bailed out the entire New York Stock Exchange during the crash requested him to refrain from further short selling Livermore agreed and instead profited from the rebound boosting his net worth to 3 million 6 He bought a 200 000 yacht a rail car and an apartment on the Upper West Side He joined exclusive clubs and had mistresses 6 In 1908 he listened to advice from cotton trader Theodore H Teddy Price who told him to buy cotton while Price secretly sold He went bankrupt but was able to recover all of his losses 6 In 1915 he filed bankruptcy again 11 Following the end of World War I Livermore secretly cornered the market in cotton It was only interception by President Woodrow Wilson prompted by a call from the United States Secretary of Agriculture who asked him to the White House for a discussion that stopped his move He agreed to sell back the cotton at break even thus preventing a troublesome rise in the price of cotton When asked why he had cornered the cotton market Livermore replied To see if I could Mr President 12 In 1924 1925 he engaged in market manipulation making 10 million trading wheat and corn in a battle with Arthur W Cutten 6 and engineering a short squeeze on the stock of Piggly Wiggly 9 In early 1929 he amassed huge short positions using more than 100 stockbrokers to hide what he was doing By the spring he was down over 6 million on paper However upon the Wall Street Crash of 1929 he netted approximately 100 million 6 Following a series of newspaper articles declaring him the Great Bear of Wall Street he was blamed for the crash by the public and received death threats leading him to hire an armed bodyguard 9 His second divorce in 1932 the non fatal shooting of his son by his wife in 1935 and a lawsuit from his Russian mistress led to a decline in his mental health while the creation of the U S Securities and Exchange Commission in 1934 imposed new rules that affected his trading Although it is unknown exactly how it happened 12 he eventually lost his fortune and filed bankruptcy for the third time in 1934 listing assets of 84 000 and debts of 2 5 million 9 6 He was suspended as a member of the Chicago Board of Trade on March 7 1934 12 In 1937 he paid off his 800 000 tax bill 13 In 1939 he opened a financial advisory business selling a technical analysis system 9 Personal life editOne of Livermore s favorite books was Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds by Charles Mackay first published in 1841 That was also a favorite book of Bernard Baruch a stock trader and close friend of Livermore 5 He enjoyed fishing and in 1937 he caught a 486 pound swordfish 14 Marriages edit Livermore was married three times and had two children He married his first wife Netit Nettie Jordan of Indianapolis at the age of 23 in October 1900 They had only known each other a few weeks before they got married 6 Less than a year later he went broke after some bad trades For a new stake he asked her to pawn the substantial collection of jewelry he had bought her but she refused permanently damaging their relationship 6 They separated soon thereafter but Livermore funded the defense of his brother in law Chester S Jordan who was charged with murdering his wife 12 15 They finally divorced in October 1917 12 On December 2 1918 at the age of 40 Livermore married 22 23 year old Dorothea Dorothy Fox Wendt a former Ziegfeld girl in Ziegfeld Follies 12 Livermore had affairs with several of the dancers 6 The couple had two sons Jesse Livermore II born in 1919 and Paul born in 1922 6 He then bought an expensive house in Great Neck and let his wife spend as much as she wanted on the furnishings 6 In 1927 he and his wife were robbed at gunpoint in their home 6 The relationship became strained by Dorothy s drinking habits Livermore s affairs with other Ziegfeld girls and their lavish spending 6 In 1931 Dorothy Livermore filed for divorce and took up temporary residence in Reno Nevada with her new lover James Walter Longcope On September 16 1932 the divorce was granted and she immediately married her boyfriend She retained custody of their two sons and received a 10 million settlement 6 Dorothy sold the house in Great Neck on which Livermore spent 3 5 million for 222 000 The house was then torn down depressing Livermore 6 On March 28 1933 Livermore now 56 married 38 year old singer and socialite Harriet Metz Noble in Geneva Illinois They had met in 1931 in Vienna where Metz Noble was performing and Livermore was in the audience on vacation Metz Noble was from a prominent Omaha family that had made a fortune in the Metz Brewery Company Livermore was Metz Noble s fifth husband at least two of Metz s previous husbands had committed suicide including Warren Noble who hanged himself after the Wall Street Crash of 1929 16 6 Publications editIn late 1939 Livermore s son Jesse Jr suggested to his father that he write a book about trading The book How to Trade in Stocks was published by Duell Sloan and Pearce in March 1940 The book did not sell well as World War II was underway and the general interest in the stock market was low His investment methods were controversial at the time and the book received mixed reviews upon publication 12 Death editOn Thanksgiving day November 28 1940 just after 5 30 pm Livermore fatally shot himself with an Automatic Colt Pistol in the cloakroom of The Sherry Netherland hotel in Manhattan where he usually had cocktails Police found a suicide note of eight small handwritten pages in Livermore s personal leather bound notebook 10 17 The note was addressed to Livermore s wife Harriet whom Livermore nicknamed Nina and it read My dear Nina Can t help it Things have been bad with me I am tired of fighting Can t carry on any longer This is the only way out I am unworthy of your love I am a failure I am truly sorry but this is the only way out for me Love Laurie 12 Further reading editBooks about Livermore include 1923 Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefevre A best selling semi fictionalized biography of Livermore though his identity is veiled in the book Multiple reissues since the latest issued on January 17 2006 with a foreword by Roger Lowenstein ISBN 0 471 77088 4 ISBN 978 0 471 77088 6 PDF 1985 Jesse Livermore Speculator King by Paul Sarnoff ISBN 0 934380 10 4 2001 Jesse Livermore The World s Greatest Stock Trader by Richard Smitten ISBN 0 471 02326 4 2003 Speculation as a Fine Art by Dickson G Watts ISBN 0 87034 056 5 PDF 2004 Trade Like Jesse Livermore by Richard Smitten ISBN 0 471 65585 6 PDF 2004 Lessons from the Greatest Stock Traders of All Time by John Boik 2006 How Legendary Traders Made Millions by John Boik 2007 The Secret of Livermore Analyzing the Market Key System by Andras Nagy ISBN 978 0 9753093 7 7 2014 Jesse Livermore Boy Plunger by Tom Rubython Foreword by Paul Tudor Jones ISBN 978 0 9570605 7 9 References edit a b Lefevre Edwin 1923 Reminiscences of a Stock Operator Harriman House Limited ISBN 9780857190567 Millman Gregory J The Original Day Trader Forbes Retrieved December 5 2019 Abbott Robert June 18 2019 Big Mistakes Jesse Livermore GuruFocus Kenneth Fisher 100 Minds That Made the Market ISBN 978 0470139516 Wiley 2007 a b Smitten Richard November 11 2004 Trade Like Jesse Livermore Wiley ISBN 0 471 65585 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Shen Lucinda July 17 2015 Why Wall Street traders are obsessed with Jesse Livermore Business Insider Rubython Tom 2015 Jesse Livermore Boy Plunger Bere Regis United Kingdom The Myrtle Press p 382 ISBN 978 0 9906199 1 8 a b c Rubython Tom 2015 Jesse Livermore Boy Plunger Bere Regis United Kingdom The Myrtle Press p 382 ISBN 978 0 9906199 1 8 a b c d e Millman Gregory J December 27 1999 The Original Day Trader Forbes a b Henriques Diana B September 9 2001 Off the Shelf A Speculator s Life Is Still Elusive The New York Times Cotton King A Bankrupt Jesse L Livermore Loses Millions He Made in Wall Street The New York Times February 18 1915 a b c d e f g h Smitten Richard September 14 2001 Jesse Livermore The World s Greatest Stock Trader Wiley ISBN 0 934380 75 9 Livermore Pays Up His 800 000 Tax Bill Speculator s Attorney Silent on Possible Plans for Another Come Back The New York Times April 1 1937 70 Yachts Moored Off Montauk Club Jesse Livermore Brings Ashore There 486 Pound Swordfish Almost a Club Record The New York Times July 6 1937 Wife Slayer Aided by Cotton Plunger The New York Times September 5 1908 Hansen Matthew October 27 2015 Hansen Tale of Omaha s black widow is too tempting to not investigate Omaha World Herald Business Boy Plunger Time December 9 1940 nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Jesse Livermore Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jesse Livermore amp oldid 1184413477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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