Advice to the Graduates Starting on a Trading Floor

To succeed as a trader, a trainee must first navigate the minefield of their first few months on the job. It is important enough that in Trader Construction Kit I devote an entire chapter to the challenges of assimilating into a trading desk. As the class of 2017 prepares to shake off their crushing post-graduation hangovers and seek their fortunes in New York, Chicago, Connecticut, London, Paris, and Frankfurt, here are some pieces of practical advice that I wish I’d had at the start of my career:

 

1.    It’s not going to be like a job at a tech start-up.

2.    A new hire is no longer a beautiful and unique snowflake.

3.    Trainees don’t have a name until they earn one.

4.    A junior trader will need support from a variety of other groups to succeed, so better start cultivating it.

5.    There is a massive difference between academic understanding and practitioner mastery of the same material.

6.    Learning and assimilating the corporate culture is everything.

7.    There are a million ways to self-sabotage, choose none of them.

8.    Opinions are formed very rapidly, and second chances are rarely given.

9.    There are different rules for different people.

10. It’s a competition, so start competing.

 

1. It’s not going to be like a job at a tech start-up.

In contrast to well-funded start-ups where seemingly every n00b coder is welcomed with an avalanche of corporate-logo swag and a personal robot smoothie valet, new arrivals on a trading floor will typically face an altogether less hospitable greeting. In the best-case scenario, they will get the desk, chair, and computer previously employed by the most recent person to get fired. In a firm where “our most important asset is our people”, they may rate a terse “Hey” from the stressed-out zombie sitting across from them and, maybe, directions to the bathroom.

This coddling gap can be hard to stomach when, after being operatically berated by a belligerent MD with a hair-trigger temper, the recent grad sees an Instagram selfie by their ex-roommate on a kite-sailing boondoggle in St. Barthes to celebrate the killer launch of their new mobile app for pets. Guess who just happened to run into the Hadid sisters on the beach! Like? No! Do Not Like!

 

2. A new hire is no longer a beautiful and unique snowflake.

MBA students from top-flight universities have been groomed to be the future leaders of the world, special people with unique talents and limitless potential. PhDs from top-flight universities are even more special, like magical unicorns covered in genius dust. Imagine how they must feel when they arrive on the trading floor, chock full of potential and genius dust, only to be called a dumbass by a Cro-Magnon trader with a Bachelor’s degree from a community college. How dare they! I have an asteroid named after me. A big one!

The somewhat depressing revelation for many expensively educated hires is that, at a top-flight financial institution, gaudy degrees and cited contributions to basic science are extremely common. “Chess Grandmaster? We have four already. Now that you’re here, we have enough for a basketball team. You can play the String Theory PhDs from Risk Management.”

 

3. Trainees don’t have a name until they earn one.

Nobody on a trading desk bothers to learn a new person’s name until they do something to distinguish themselves, good or bad. To compensate, most new employees end up with some sort of a behind-the-back nickname, which can range from cruelly dehumanizing to totally bad-ass. Sure, everybody wants to be “The Punisher” or “El Diablo”, but sadly, most people end up as “Tuna Sandwich Guy” or “Lax Bro #4”.

They shouldn’t get upset, and they shouldn’t take it personally. It happens to everyone. When they become a senior trader (if they become a senior trader), it will be their turn to be too busy grinding their teeth and staring in horror at the wreckage of their crude oil position to pay attention to what’s-his-name sitting across from them wearing a Brine Lacrosse polo shirt and eating a tuna sandwich.

 

4. A junior trader will need support from a variety of other groups to succeed, so better start cultivating it.

As seen in this excerpt from Chapter 16 – Navigating the Corporate Culture of Trader Construction Kit:

“The modern professional trader is almost never a lone wolf. At anything other than the smallest shops, he will rely on a variety of support functions from deal entry to risk management to analytical and operational support. The ability to productively interact with the other groups on the floor and the other traders is critical.” [1]

Building those bridges as a new hire can sometimes be tricky, particularly when dealing with on-desk analysts and risk managers that were never considered (or passed over) for the open trading job. They will often choose to take out their frustrations on the person who was hired in a passive-aggressive fashion. This is doubly problematic if the newly-minted trader relies heavily on them for informational inputs, or is subject to their risk management oversight. There is no easy solution, but one productive approach is to remind the slighted analyst or risk manager that the only constant in a trading organization is turnover, and that maximizing their interactions with the desk (including its newest inhabitant) is the surest way to improve their chances at the next job.

 

5. There is a massive difference between academic understanding and practitioner mastery of the same material.

Some new hires (particularly those with asteroids named after them) feel compelled to prove this point early in their career by voluntarily lecturing the senior traders and management on their deep, penetrating insights into the market gleaned from their Advanced Topics in Finance capstone project. This tends to go poorly. Almost by definition, nothing a trainee trader says for the first three to six months is good for anything other than the amusement of the rest of the desk.

One of the primary tasks of any new trader is to identify their particular knowledge gaps relative to their more experienced colleagues, then seek to close them as rapidly as possible. They must read all of the relevant industry research and analysis, study the benchmark texts on trading (a list of resources can be found here), ask questions, and accept all offers from more experienced traders to sit with them and have them explain the nuances of their market. The lack of practical market knowledge is the most glaring deficiency common to all new hires, and it is completely understandable. You can read as many books about proper swimming technique as you want (including my forthcoming 624 page textbook, Swimmer Construction Kit…just kidding), but that body of theory does not compare with what you learn in five minutes when you jump in the ocean and try to keep your head above water. There really aren’t any shortcuts to understanding how a market works, which comes with time, focused observation, and continuous immersion.

 

6. Learning and assimilating the corporate culture is everything.

Again, from Chapter 16 – Navigating the Corporate Culture of Trader Construction Kit:

“The trading floor is a workplace unlike any other, and can vary significantly from firm to firm. The atmosphere on the floor is determined by the trading culture, and the trading culture is determined to a great degree by the head trader and his lieutenants. Some floors are hushed libraries of academic intensity, silent except for grinding teeth, mouse clicks, and the soft snap of Advil and Adderall bottles being opened and closed. In a more clubby atmosphere one might see formerly staid bankers slouching around at a hedge fund in polo shirts and deck shoes, alternating world-weary market chatter with shot-by-shot analysis of the last round of golf. At a global financial powerhouse the floor will be a football-field-sized maze of desks, screens, and over-dressed stress cases ready to out-intense the other ex-lacrosse bros for a chance at the Associate Junior Vice-President slot opening up next fiscal year. At a scrappy up-and-comer the trading room will be furnished with homemade plywood desks and lawn chairs, and the three founders will try to out-gamble their cash burn in their shorts and flip-flops while playing first-person shooters on the office Xbox.

Succeeding as a trader is dependent on being accepted on the floor, whatever its quirks and characteristics. It may feel disconcertingly like being back in high school.” [2]

Please note, I’m not suggesting that a conformist attitude is in any way mandatory. Ideally, the trader would have researched the firm’s culture as part of their interview preparation (some thoughts on that here) and chosen a firm that was a good match for their personality. What I am saying is that the early days on a trading floor are not the time to ruffle feathers, pick fights, or in any way piss off the people that the junior trader desperately needs to learn from to survive. An awareness of and sensitivity to the unwritten cultural rules will go a long way to helping the new hire integrate onto the desk.

 

7. There are a million ways to self-sabotage, choose none of them.

Chances are, a recent graduate at a finance firm will be living in a new, exciting city and getting their first taste of real money, which often leads to all sorts of extracurricular bad behavior. Beware, it is entirely possible to party yourself out of a job, particularly when taking into consideration…

 

8. Opinions are formed very rapidly, and second chances are rarely given.

One last excerpt from Chapter 16 – Navigating the Corporate Culture of Trader Construction Kit:

“As discussed in Chapter 14 – Managing Positions, sooner or later every trader will have to deal with a significant losing position. Young traders are particularly vulnerable, due to their relative lack of experience anticipating dangerous market conditions, aptitude at handling them, and absence of built-up credibility with the desk and senior management.

The first disastrous trade is frequently a career-defining moment for a young trader. If he manages the problematic position efficiently and acquits himself in a professional manner, he will earn respect and a continued ability to do business. Making a bad situation worse and exhibiting poor behavior will likely ensure that the trader’s first bad trade will be his last.” [3]

Most early-career traders fail to understand exactly how thin the ice beneath their feet is during the first few months until they find their footing and start to produce meaningful profits for the firm. The most common mistake is over-aggressively sizing their positions and risk tolerances relative to those of their more experienced colleagues. For a senior trader with a $50M target and $20M annual stop-loss, losing $1M is a bad day at the office, nothing more. The same loss for a junior trader would likely be devastating, particularly if they compound the error by not exercising good discipline, losing control of the exposure, and failing to show the proper degree of respect for the firm’s capital.

 

9. There are different rules for different people.

As I mentioned in the recent post titled Making The Transition from Support Group to Trading Desk (which can be read here):

“It can be difficult for support staff to understand (or stomach) that there are two sets of rules, one for the trading desk and one for everyone else. Profitable traders are often granted an almost incomprehensible degree of behavioral latitude, frequently going unpunished for actions that would mean discipline or dismissal for an employee that wasn’t currently up $50M for the year. It’s not right, and it’s not particularly fair, but it does happen.“

Trading is all about production. A proven money-maker, particularly a big hitter, will quickly develop a level of importance to their firm that will obscure almost any negative characteristics or actions. An unproven junior trader will not be cut anything like this level of slack, and it is critical that they understand this before overstepping their bounds and committing a damaging faux pas. They must also be aware that the latitude that profits grant is quickly erased by drawdowns and underperformance. It’s all jeans and flip flops and coming and going as you please when you’re up, but the second the P&L goes negative its back to 12 hour days in a suit until you earn it all back.

 

10. It’s a competition, so start competing.

I characterized the first few month on a trading desk as a minefield, which would logically suggest an approach built on caution, deliberation, and measured progress. The problem is, it actually a race through a minefield. Being first to get up to speed on the market means first to get a trading book, which means first to generate P&L, which means the best chance to be the top performer at the Junior/Assistant Trader level, which means the first to be promoted to Trader, etc. Everything on a trading floor is first, fastest, or best, and the reward for being any or all of those is money. Lots of money. Better get going. Chances are someone in your class read this post an hour ago and is already on page 34 of Liar’s Poker.

Good luck.

 

 

[1, 2, 3] Excerpts from Trader Construction Kit Copyright © 2016 Joel Rubano. All rights reserved. No part may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by reviewers, who may quote brief passages in a review.

The Importance of Developing a Trading Methodology

In the first chapter of Trader Construction Kit (which can be read here) I assert that succeeding as a professional trader is a two-part problem: personal evolution to become the best possible risk taker and developing, refining and deploying an efficient process for interacting with the market. Given the recent widespread popularity of Behavioral Finance, most aspiring traders are aware of the need to improve their decision making and avoid common biases in risk taking behaviors. There is significantly less material available on how to develop a robust trading methodology, which I describe in idealized form in the following excerpt from the chapter:

  • The ideal trader has a clear sense of what she is trying to achieve at all times.
  • The trader expects a particular market response when a base set of fundamental and technical conditions are disturbed by incremental change or the influence of external stimuli. This informed perspective on the future of price is called a view.
  • The trader considers a variety of strategies to implement her view, selecting the one with the closest response to the underlying driver with the best potential reward, the lowest probable risk, and the best performance characteristics.
  • The trader sets the position with a defined profit target and a stop-loss.
  • The trader monitors the position for changes to the underlying thesis while maintaining an alert, intellectually engaged but emotionally detached state.
  • If action is required, the trader executes with the maximum possible efficiency.
  • The trader evaluates the results and adjusts the operational parameters (trade selection criteria, stops, targets, etc.) of the methodology as necessary.
  • Repeat.[1]

 

Exploring each point in greater detail, we see that:

A trader must have a clear sense of their goals, as without a defined set of expectations it is impossible to calibrate their allocation of resources and relative level of aggression. A firm grasp on their capability to take risk is essential when formulating position sizes and evaluating resource-intensive trading strategies.

A trader must incorporate all of the available relevant information into their decision-making process, given their stylistic predilections. While I feel that it is logical to incorporate both fundamental facts and technical information, many traders prefer to start with a more curated set of purely fundamental or technical inputs. Whatever works for the individual. One universal constant is that the trader’s analysis and interpretation of the informational inputs must lead to their view on the future of prices, not be an after-the-fact justification for a pre-conceived notion that the market is going higher or lower.

Once the trader has developed a view of the market they must evaluate the options available for establishing an exposure to capitalize on the anticipated price fluctuation(s). Different traders will have different resource allocations and products approved for use, and their ability to employ them will be a function of their relative year-to-date performance. A trader must consider all potential implementation strategies, evaluating each alternative on how much capital it puts at risk, the potential reward, and the unique performance characteristics that will impact its response to market fluctuations. The ability to accurately assess the relationship between risk and potential reward is the key determinant of a trader’s long-run success. Typically, a trader will require a reward that is a multiple of the amount they have put at risk to justify a position.

Having evaluated a variety of options to arrive at the optimal strategy to express their view, the trader must develop a plan to implement it in the market. A good trading plan will include (among other considerations) a stop-loss level beyond which the trader will concede that the position is not working and exit and profit target where they will happily book their winnings. The stop-loss and profit target must be derived prior to establishing the exposure, as this allows for a more clinical, unbiased assessment.

A trade is an exposure designed to express a view on the future of prices, a perspective that was informed by pre-trade analysis of the market conditions. Market conditions are not constant. The trader will have to remain immersed in the market and alert for any changes to the underlying drivers of their view. If the evolution is unfavorable, they must exit the position immediately.

When entering and exiting the positon the trader will seek to execute as efficiently as possible to minimize slippage and other transactional costs, which act as a tax on the profitability of the exposure.

Once the position has been closed and the P&L realized, the trader will forensically re-examine their decision making across the entire process, regardless of positive or negative outcome. While this type of methodological tuning is valuable for experienced traders, it is absolutely critical for younger traders who are still developing their approach to the market.

When all is said and done, the trader will start over at the beginning: watching the market, taking in information, and using it to re-formulate a view of the future of price.

From this basic blueprint the trader will add, subtract or modify elements as needed to adapt it to the demands of their particular market, take maximum advantage of their unique strengths, and de-emphasize their inherent weaknesses. Every trader should seek to leverage their comparative advantages relative to their peers in the market, wherever and whatever they may be. If they are a talented fundamental analyst, their methodology should over-weight fundamental inputs when deriving a view of the market. A skilled option trader might be able to contemplate constructing complex non-linear positions that might not seem as attractive or viable to a directional or spread trader, etc.

Developing a trading methodology is a complicated topic, and it would not be a stretch to claim that the majority of the 624 pages of Trader Construction Kit are dedicated to a step-by-step explanation of the process. For readers interested in a deeper dive into the material, I will be publishing a series of excerpts from Trader Construction Kit starting with Chapter 3 – Fundamental Analysis and continuing through Chapter 14 – Managing Positions & Portfolios. Each excerpt will be available here for one week, and will be replaced by the next chapter the following Monday.

 

[1] Excerpt from Trader Construction Kit Copyright © 2016 Joel Rubano. All rights reserved. No part may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by reviewers, who may quote brief passages in a review.

 

Making the Transition from Support Group to Trading Desk

Preparing for a trading interview (described here) is a like cramming for an exam, a short period of intense preparation followed by a draining day-long session that demands total focus and maximum effort. Sadly, most candidates will fail this test. It need not be the end of the road, however. Applicants passed over for trading opportunities can often get a second bite at the apple by joining a trading firm in a support capacity, then seeking to move onto the desk. Making the transition to a trading seat from a support role will take preparation, a plan, and a significant amount of discipline and endurance, and the relative success or failure of the effort will often hinge on the individual’s interpersonal skills as much as their technical knowledge.

 

Newly-hired support staff will be slotted into the firm in either a front office, middle office, or back office role. The front office is the commercial function of the firm, encompassing the trading and origination desks and personnel that work closely with them, including dedicated on-desk analysts, members of the structuring group, and senior fundamental and quantitative analysts. Middle office functions include the risk group (though it is technically outside of the trading reporting chain), the portion of the analytics groups that does not report directly to trading, and the operations group that handles the scheduling and delivery of physical transactions. The back office handles purely administrative functions, and is composed of the credit group, the legal group, the contract administrators, and the compliance group. The closer to the desk the aspiring trader starts, the better.

 

Support staff should expect to receive little help in their progress toward the desk from their current management, as the heads of support functions are concerned with maintaining a smoothly operating group, not serving as a training ground for another business unit or facilitating the aspirations of their employees. It will be necessary for the aspiring trader to carve out some portion of their day to work on building relationships with the members of the trading desk and acquiring the skills and market knowledge necessary to progress, which in practice may mean coming in early and/or staying late to actually complete their assigned work.

 

It is critical for support staff to understand that the onus will be on them to drive the process. As seem in this excerpt from Trader Construction Kit:

 

“There is one huge misconception that prevents people from being hired onto a trading desk from some other area of the company: aspirants believe that some innate quality of theirs will shine through as they toil away on the cover sheets for their TPS reports, that senior management will somehow identify it through unspecified means and, in a stirring act of trust and belief, whisk the employee off into a fairytale world of four-screen desks, turret phones, and lavish compensation. It does not work like that. Anyone seeking to escape support-staff hell will have to do the following:

  1. Make the management of the trading desk aware that he really wants to be a trader and would strongly consider anything up to and including murder as a means of career advancement.
  2. Make sure he understands the requirements of the position he is seeking, and show that he is attempting to evolve in that direction, to the maximum extent possible. This is the crux of the matter. Nobody cares how good of a confirmations analyst or accounts payable coordinator the anonymous drone from down the hall is; it has no bearing on their capability to fill a trading seat.
  3. Be engaged in the firm’s business, show interest, initiative, and make the most of any opportunity. It is difficult for a person in a support function to be current on the market, but he can at least know which markets the firm participates in, etc.”

 

The goal is to be seen as the first in line for the next trading vacancy by the trading desk. Support functions are powerless to push an analyst or risk manager onto the trading desk. Senior management of the firm can facilitate a move, but are generally loathe to anger the producers by shoving someone into the group that they may not want. The desk has to feel the candidate is a good fit and can add value to consider bringing them on, otherwise they will go to the external market. Every internal candidate will be competing against the universe of potential external hires on the basis of being a (probably) cheaper known quantity with upside potential. If the desk does not know the candidate and believe that they have something to offer and room to grow, they will hire from outside the firm.

 

There are potential downsides to being on what amounts to a multi-year job interview. Familiarity breeds contempt, which cuts both ways. The day-to-day interaction with the trading desk gives the traders the opportunity to form opinions about the analysts, etc. There is a need for the support staff member to guard and curate their professional image over an extended period of time, which can be challenging. Being on point for eight hours of interviews is hard, maintaining that level of focus for eighteen months is extremely stressful. Worse yet, seventeen months and twenty nine days of focus, dedication and unwavering competency can be completely undone by one bad day, blown presentation, stupid argument, or regrettable social interaction. It can be difficult for support staff to understand (or stomach) that there are two sets of rules, one for the trading desk and one for everyone else. Profitable traders are often granted an almost incomprehensible degree of behavioral latitude, frequently going unpunished for actions that would mean discipline or dismissal for an employee that wasn’t currently up $50M for the year. It’s not right, and it’s not particularly fair, but it does happen.

 

One of the biggest (and most inexplicable) mistakes support staff make is to loudly, publically assert that they should have a trading job because they are smarter, have more latent talent, or have a more advanced degree than the people currently on the desk. It normal for nascent markets to reward different behaviors and skill sets than developed markets require, and each successive generation of analysts and traders will invariably be better educated and start from a higher informational baseline than their predecessors, sometimes to a ridiculous extent. This can be extremely frustrating for newly-minted PhDs expected to take orders (and abuse) from a comparative Cro-Magnon with a low-rent bachelors degree who lucked into the last good trading job right before the market evolved. Highly educated newcomers would do well to remember that every successful trader has developed (or assimilated) an experientially-based body of knowledge and technique for operating in the market, one that they will need to master to take their place on the desk. Alienating the only source of information is a very, very bad idea.

 

Support staff need to be aware of, and take maximum advantage of, their opportunities to interact with the trading desk and learn the firm’s business. If a senior trader offers to explain something about the market, make time to listen. If the head of analytics offers research that informs the traders’ decisions, be sure to read it. If there is a mentoring program, join and take full advantage of it. If there is internal training, sign up for it. Do not squander opportunities. Help that is refused and resources not taken advantage of will not be re-offered, and members of the trading desk will definitely remember analysts who bemoan their lack of advancement but were “too busy” to sit on the desk, go to a class, or read a research report.

 

In addition to the market and product-specific knowledge that support staff will have to assimilate by osmosis from the traders and on-desk analysts there will be a great deal of basic information that they will have to master. A list of resources (Trader Construction Kit among them) can be found here.

 

An aspiring trader temporarily trapped in support-staff purgatory should use their newfound perspective to honestly re-assess themselves relative to the demands of the job in general and the particular way it is practiced at their firm. As the saying goes: Everybody likes sausage, until they see how it is made. Seeing firsthand what the job entails and the demands it makes of its practitioners has led many aspirants to realize that it really isn’t for them, after all. Figuring that out before making a committing move to the desk is a mature, sensible decision. A productive career as a risk manager or analyst at a successful firm will frequently be significantly more lucrative, in the long run, than an unsuccessful stint on a trading desk followed by a swift termination.

 

In summary, support staff must do the following to transition to the trading desk: 

  1. Take responsibility and drive the process, to the maximum extent possible, as their current job will typically not have an established evolutionary path to the trading desk.
  2. Understand that there will be a substantial amount of self-education, both in terms of specific markets and products and general trading information.
  3. Immerse themselves in the culture of the firm and the trading desk, in particular.
  4. Take advantage of every opportunity to work with and learn from members of the trading desk, both to develop knowledge and to build relationships.
  5. Be professional and learn to deal with adversity instead of becoming frustrated and giving up, lashing out, or finding any one of a hundred ways to self-sabotage their progress toward their goal.

 

Aspiring traders must dedicate themselves to the process, work to increase their knowledge base, and take advantage of every opportunity to make the small, incremental steps that will ultimately lead to their jump to the trading desk.

 

 

 

Excerpt from Trader Construction Kit Copyright © 2016 Joel Rubano. All rights reserved. No part may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by reviewers, who may quote brief passages in a review.

Trader Construction Kit Adopted by a Second University

I am pleased to announce that Trader Construction Kit has been adopted by a second school for use in the upcoming Spring semester. Trader Construction Kit will be the primary textbook for a portfolio management seminar at a prominent Midwestern University where the participants will actively trade $250,000 of real money in the agricultural, energy, and metals markets. This is a tremendous vote of confidence, validating my belief that there continues to be a need for a practical resource to help novice traders develop the skills and techniques employed by professional market participants. With over 60 academic institutions in six countries currently reviewing Trader Construction Kit, I am excited at the prospect that it will find a place in the curriculum at many other colleges and universities. 

How to Prepare for a Trading Interview

For current university students and recent graduates, preparing for a trading interview will involve a substantial amount of industry and company-specific research. The candidate must, at a minimum:

1.     Know the Industry.

2.     Know the company and its primary business.

3.     Know the people they will be speaking with, their backgrounds, the markets they inhabit, and the products they trade.

4.     Know as much as possible about how the market is traded at the target firm, and how the candidate’s skills make them a good match for that product.

5.     Prepare for some of the obvious questions they should expect to be asked.

 

Know the Industry

The opportunities available and the types of business transacted are, to a great extent, determined by the evolutionary state of the industry. Early-stage markets offer the most opportunities for rapid advancement for candidates with an entrepreneurial mindset and a willingness to innovate in an evolving operational environment. Fully-evolved markets have established career paths, with measured progression based on the mastery of and deployment of established knowledge sets. A candidate needs to know the evolutionary state of the industry they are targeting to calibrate their expectations of the potential career progression available to them, and to understand the company’s expectations of their initial and to-be-developed skill set.

 

Know the Company

In Trader Construction Kit I focus the majority of the second chapter on describing the market activities of four categories of market participants: Hedgers, Merchants, Financials and Speculators. Each category participates in a market for specific reasons, engages in different types of risk-shedding, risk-modifying, or risk-taking activities, and hires traders will different skill sets to implement their business plan. A candidate must know what type of firm they are speaking with and understand the basics of their core business and corporate culture.

 

Know the People and the Markets

In a Google and LinkedIn world there is no excuse for a candidate not having a basic familiarity with the backgrounds of their interviewers. The person arranging the schedule will generally provide a list, if asked nicely by the candidate. The candidate must know each interviewer’s position within the company to understand their function, their implied perspective, and develop a sense of what sorts of questions to anticipate. A risk manager with a Masters in physics and a PhD in quantitative finance will have entirely different concerns and ask entirely different questions than a proprietary trader with a background in the crude oil pits and scars on his knuckles. The candidate must find a way to be relatable to both.

A candidate should expect to speak to the head trader, their lieutenants (one of whom will be the hiring manager), a junior person to provide a skill-set comparison with a near-peer, and potentially members of the risk, analytics, and compliance groups. If that sounds like a lot of people, it is, and an aspiring trader should expect a full day of half-hour to hour long conversations with one or two people at a time. It can be difficult to maintain focus, but in the vast majority of cases the candidate must leave a positive impression on every interviewer and really shine with the one or two shot-callers they meet.

 

Know How They Fit In as a Candidate

In Chapter 1 of Trader Construction Kit (which is available here), I list the positive characteristics of successful traders and the negative traits of unsuccessful ones. The candidate must accurately assess their unique strengths and weaknesses and how they apply to the demands of the trading environment at their target firm. If the candidate wants to build bleeding-edge algorithms at an industry-leading quantitative hedge fund, they had better really know how to code or they will be laughed out of the room. Ditto for an unassertive pit trader, a non-mathematical option trader, a disorganized market-maker, or an indecisive directional trader. There is no shame in being a poor fit for a particular job at a particular firm. There is a tremendous amount of shame in showing up for the interview either not knowing that, or attempting to pass oneself off as something they are not.

 

Prepare For the Obvious Questions

A current student or recent graduate with little to no practical trading experience to be quizzed on should expect the standard probability and logic based questions. Read up on the Monte Hall question, basic conditional probability problems, and (my personal favorite) the TV Question. The candidate should expect questions about sports played, team activities, and their propensity for gambling and other risk-taking behaviors. In lieu of actual experience, the traders will want to see that the candidate can logically process information and make decisions quickly under stress. At some firms it is very fashionable to manufacture an artificially stressful environment to test the candidate, others will prefer a more collegial, conversational approach.

The candidate should also have at least a superficial familiarity with the benchmark informational resources for the market, both in terms of the standard educational texts and the book/blog/site/news of the moment that everyone is currently reading or talking about. Giving a blank stare to an interviewer who name-checks Nassim Taleb or references The Big Short is a big negative. A list of some common resources that an aspiring trader can investigate to help them prepare for an interview (Trader Construction Kit among them) can be found here.

 

It is very common for even a top-notch candidate from a strong academic program to be hired into the firm in a non-commercial support position, either as an assistant trader, analyst, risk-manager or deal structurer. Support functions typically serve as a combination apprenticeship and extended interview for the trading desk. Making the transition from a support role to the trading desk presents its own set of unique challenges, which will be the subject of a follow-up post. 

 

Please use the Contact form to forward any comments or suggestions for future posts. The author can also be reached at:

info@traderconstructionkit.com

The Complete Reading List for Aspiring Traders

Trader Construction Kit was written as a response to a decade and a half of inquiries from frustrated junior colleagues, analysts, risk managers and support staff seeking the best book to learn how markets worked and how to develop the skills necessary to make the move onto the trading desk. Unfortunately, there was no one resource at the time, so I would cobble together a reading list of a dozen or so texts, a handful of magazine and journal articles, and a movie or three. Some were classics in the field, others somewhat more esoteric, but each illustrated a particular aspect of what it meant to be a successful trader (or, in some cases, an extremely unsuccessful trader). That same list can also serve as the logical extension of the material covered in Trader Construction Kit, building on the methodological framework and expanding the reader’s knowledge base.

The Best Books for Beginning Traders:

  1. Liar’s Poker: Rising Through the Wreckage on Wall Street by Michael Lewis
  2. Bombardiers by Po Bronson
  3. Metal Men: How Marc Rich Defrauded the Country, Evaded the Law, and Became the World’s Most Sought-After Corporate Criminal by A. Craig Copetas
  4. When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management by Roger Lowenstein
  5. Rogue Trader by Nick Leeson
  6. Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull
  7. Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets: A Comprehensive Guide to Trading Methods and Applications by John J. Murphy
  8. Dynamic Hedging: Managing Vanilla and Exotic Options by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  9. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre
  10. Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager
  11. The New Market Wizards: Conversations with America’s Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager
  12. Charlie D. The Story of the Legendary Bond Trader by William D. Falloon
  13. Every Hand Revealed by Gus Hansen

The first five books focus on what it means to be a trader, the next three build the technical skills necessary to operate in the market, and the final five act as an extended series of case studies on trading decisions.

Beginning with the first five experiential books:

 

1.     Liar’s Poker: Rising Through the Wreckage on Wall Street by Michael Lewis

Liar’s Poker has probably set more people on the path to the trading desk than any other book (it certainly did, in my case). Liar’s Poker is Michael Lewis’ first-hand account of his time on the New York and London bond trading floors at the legendary Wall Street bank Salomon Brothers in the late 1980s. It is by far the most accessible book on trading, providing a clear, accurate (if slightly dated) perspective on how bank trading floors operate and the types of people that inhabit them. It is also extremely funny. Liar’s Poker is a must-read, particularly for those not currently in the industry or who are unfamiliar with how trading desks function.

 

2.     Bombardiers by Po Bronson

Bombardiers is the fictional account of a group of bond salesmen at the San Francisco office of a global investment bank in the 1990s that are pushed to, and in some cases past, the breaking point by the stresses of the job. Bombardiers most accurately captures the frenetic feel and surreal insanity of a modern trading floor, and does so while managing to be funnier than Michael Lewis’ Liar’s Poker.

 

3.     Metal Men: How Marc Rich Defrauded the Country, Evaded the Law, and Became the World’s Most Sought-After Corporate Criminal by A. Craig Copetas

Metal Men is a relatively unknown book (which used to be all-but impossible to find) that offers a view into the rarely-seen world of commodity merchants operating in an early-stage physical market. The book takes place during the advent of the spot crude oil market in the 1960s and 70s, and offers a wealth of anecdotal information about illiquid, physical trading that is unavailable from any other source. Aspiring traders would do well to take note and apply the lessons to their job search, as developing markets offer some of the best conditions for job creation and rapid advancement, as well as presenting the smallest hill to climb in terms of the established knowledge base.

 

4.     When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management by Roger Lowenstein

In the early 1990’s Long Term Capital Management was home to the most incandescently brilliant collection of bankers and traders ever assembled, deploying state-of-the-art trading technology to generate eye-popping returns and basking in the adulation and envy of pretty much, well, everyone. Then suddenly, impossibly, the firm imploded during a tumultuous six week period in 1994. Lowenstein’s book is a detailed account of the disaster, and a fascinating tale of hubris and poor risk management by a group of individuals that could have, and indeed should have, known much better.

 

5.     Rogue Trader by Nick Leeson

Rogue Trader is the autobiographical story of how Nick Leeson singlehandedly lost $1.4B via a series of ever-larger unauthorized speculative positions while running the Singapore trading operations of Barings Bank from 1992 to 1995. Though it is sometimes criticized as being an overly self-serving interpretation of events, it is worth reading as an examination of how pressure to perform can lead a seemingly normal, relatively grounded individual into a destructive spiral of fraud and illegal activity. It is also an interesting case study of how much an organization can collectively delude itself, ignore common sense, and bend its own rules to accommodate a star employee operating what appears to be an extremely profitable business.

 

6.     Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull

It is difficult to overstate the importance of Hull’s Options, Futures and Other Derivatives, which is ironic, considering that it is generally referred to as “the bible” of the financial markets. Recently updated in a 9th edition, it is a big, imposing book that has evolved and expanded its scope considerably with each successive iteration. Option trading has a large and extremely complex body of theory, and can be an extremely daunting subject for the uninitiated. Trader Construction Kit presents an introduction to the basics of the options market, standard valuation models, Greek risk measurements, and provides a dynamic hedging example…and even that relatively condensed coverage necessitated by far the largest and most complicated chapter of the book. Hull’s text provides the most complete coverage of the topic available, and offers a clear, comprehensive treatment of the mathematics underlying derivative pricing models and the resulting risk metrics. It should be considered mandatory reading for prospective practitioners, particularly those interested in option-centric careers in derivative trading, transaction structuring, and complex deal origination. This is doubly true for a trader contemplating a customer-facing role at a bank, merchant, or asset management firm, where it is almost impossible to price and hedge deal flow without a solid understanding of option fundamentals.

 

7.     Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets: A Comprehensive Guide to Trading Methods and Applications by John J. Murphy

Technical analysis is the study of chart patterns as a window into market sentiment and trader psychology, and is an extremely polarizing concept in the industry. Some practitioners flatly refuse to acknowledge its predictive utility, while others exclusively employ pattern-based analysis of the market to generate trading strategies. I make the argument in Trader Construction Kit that a hybrid approach incorporating both fundamental and technical information sources is maximally effective, employing technical analysis to refine the trader’s view and provide perspective on the potential magnitude and direction of price responses to the evolution of the fundamental landscape. Technical analysis has an extremely large body of theory, ranging from simple graphical tools to exotic, complex interpretation systems. I believe that the basic trend and pattern analysis techniques can be applied to any liquid product, regardless of market, and therefore have the most predictive utility. Murphy’s Technical Analysis is the benchmark resource for understanding the core concepts of trend, support, resistance, and pattern analysis. The main value in Murphy’s text resides in chapters 4 through 6, where he discusses the basic patterns common to all markets and gives clear, concise interpretations as to why they occur, their significance, and the implications for future price movements. Murphy’s book is also a worthwhile read for those who do not ever intend to employ technical analysis, but who will most certainly share the market with traders that are.

 

8.     Dynamic Hedging: Managing Vanilla and Exotic Options by Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Back in the dark ages, risk management was an obscure mathematical discipline exclusively practiced by bespectacled corporate drones and the sorts of people who once excelled at competitively reciting the digits of Pi. Traders did not practice risk management, they practiced risk taking. They also generally worked in a pit, settled disputes with their fists,  and had very little use for more than two decimal places. This all changed in 1997 with the publication of Nassim Taleb’s groundbreaking text, Dynamic Hedging. Dynamic Hedging offered the first glimpse of Taleb’s pragmatic approach to trading risk management, in which market-facing practitioners must understand the limitations and idiosyncratic nuances of the tools and techniques they deploy, lest they be destroyed by ignorance or misplaced confidence. Be warned, Taleb asks a lot of his reader, presenting high-level information at great velocity, frequently with little preamble. Prospective readers should consider a warm up lap through Hull’s Options, Futures and Other Derivatives to refresh their understanding of the basics of option theory and derivative math before attempting Dynamic Hedging.

 

9.     Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre

Every list of the best trading books must contain Edwin Lefèvre’s Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. Reminiscences is a fictional work that somehow manages to incorporate literally every significant trading principle into the boom and bust cycles of the protagonist’s story arc, all without feeling contrived or sounding like textbook. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator was published in 1923, and it is impossible to fully appreciate how revolutionary it must have been in its time. One caution for prospective readers, since as a work of fiction it is not as heavy-handedly pedagogical as a pure textbook, it is possible to inadvertently skim over valuable information. Take the time to give Reminiscences of a Stock Operator your full attention, it is well worth it.

 

10.  Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager

11.  The New Market Wizards: Conversations with America’s Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager

Jack Schwager’s Market Wizards and New Market Wizards books are a series of interviews the author conducted with a group of elite commodity, foreign exchange and bond traders. In my opinion, they are critical books for novice traders to read, preferably early in their career. Neophyte traders are frequently told that there is a “correct” way to approach a particular market. This is not true. Every trader must develop a style that compliments (and leverages) their unique individual strengths, and Schwager’s books are the best possible proof of this theorem. All manner of personalities and trading styles are on display, the common denominator being that each interview subject has developed a method of observing and interacting with the market that makes sense to them. The reader is free to compare and contrast different methodologies, a particularly useful exercise for young traders who are still evolving their own approach to the market. There is a tremendous amount of practical information on offer, and the interviews with Bill Lipschutz, Stanley Druckenmiller, Paul Tudor Jones, and James Rodgers are well worth the price of admission. 

 

12.  Charlie D. The Story of the Legendary Bond Trader by William D. Falloon

Fallon’s Charlie D is a somewhat obscure biography of bond trader Charlie DiFrancesca, who in the late 1980s was the largest independent trader in the Treasury pits (a mantle later passed to Tom Baldwin, one of the interview subjects in Schwager’s Market Wizards). Charlie D’s life story is interesting, to be sure, but the real value in the book lies in Fallon’s transcription of a videotaped presentation DiFrancesca gave in 1989 to members of the Chicago Board of Trade. It is possibly the most valuable 30 pages I have ever read on the technique of trading. Though Charlie D is describing a somewhat dated, very pit-centric method of interacting with other traders, the basic concepts of evaluating a market, acting with decisive intent when transacting, and learning to be disciplined when taking profits and losses are as critical now as they were then.

 

13.  Every Hand Revealed by Gus Hansen

I argue in Trader Construction Kit that playing medium to high-stakes no-limit poker is the best possible method of learning to take trading risk, short of actually sitting on a desk. Gus Hansen’s Every Hand Revealed presents a unique opportunity to look over the shoulder of a world-class poker player as he plays through five days of a major tournament. Hansen took detailed notes on each of the 329 hands he participated in during the tournament, including his risk/reward assessment, strategy, mid-hand decisions, and the ultimate profit or loss. The reader is able to follow along as Hansen works through 329 decisions under uncertainty, and in so doing provides a unique perspective on the cumulative effects and path dependence of trading/risk management decisions. It is fascinating to observe how Hansen’s decision calculus on the 190th hand (for example) is impacted by the considerations immediately relevant to the 190th risk/reward scenario and the cumulative information gained and psychological wear & tear accrued from hands 1 through 189. This is something not generally touched on in theoretical literature, but is very much a part of trading in the real world. Trading decisions are not isolated events that occur in a pristine intellectual vacuum, and every trader must find a constructive way to manage the ongoing process of operating in the market.

 

Please use the Contact form to forward any comments or suggestions for future posts. The author can also be reached at:

info@traderconstructionkit.com

Reading List for Aspiring Traders - Part 3

The final five books on the list serve as a series of case studies that provide perspective on how traders interact with, and learn from, their markets: 

9.     Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre

Every list of the best trading books must contain Edwin Lefèvre’s Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. Reminiscences is a fictional work that somehow manages to incorporate literally every significant trading principle into the boom and bust cycles of the protagonist’s story arc, all without feeling contrived or sounding like textbook. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator was published in 1923, and it is impossible to fully appreciate how revolutionary it must have been in its time. One caution for prospective readers, since as a work of fiction it is not as heavy-handedly pedagogical as a pure textbook, it is possible to inadvertently skim over valuable information. Take the time to give Reminiscences of a Stock Operator your full attention, it is well worth it.

10.  Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager

11.  The New Market Wizards: Conversations with America’s Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager

Jack Schwager’s Market Wizards and New Market Wizards books are a series of interviews the author conducted with a group of elite commodity, foreign exchange and bond traders. In my opinion, they are critical books for novice traders to read, preferably early in their career. Neophyte traders are frequently told that there is a “correct” way to approach a particular market. This is not true. Every trader must develop a style that compliments (and leverages) their unique individual strengths, and Schwager’s books are the best possible proof of this theorem. All manner of personalities and trading styles are on display, the common denominator being that each interview subject has developed a method of observing and interacting with the market that makes sense to them. The reader is free to compare and contrast different methodologies, a particularly useful exercise for young traders who are still evolving their own approach to the market. There is a tremendous amount of practical information on offer, and the interviews with Bill Lipschutz, Stanley Druckenmiller, Paul Tudor Jones, and James Rodgers are well worth the price of admission. 

12.  Charlie D. The Story of the Legendary Bond Trader by William D. Falloon

Fallon’s Charlie D is a somewhat obscure biography of bond trader Charlie DiFrancesca, who in the late 1980s was the largest independent trader in the Treasury pits (a mantle later passed to Tom Baldwin, one of the interview subjects in Schwager’s Market Wizards). Charlie D’s life story is interesting, to be sure, but the real value in the book lies in Fallon’s transcription of a videotaped presentation DiFrancesca gave in 1989 to members of the Chicago Board of Trade. It is possibly the most valuable 30 pages I have ever read on the technique of trading. Though Charlie D is describing a somewhat dated, very pit-centric method of interacting with other traders, the basic concepts of evaluating a market, acting with decisive intent when transacting, and learning to be disciplined when taking profits and losses are as critical now as they were then.

13.  Every Hand Revealed by Gus Hansen

I argue in Trader Construction Kit that playing medium to high-stakes no-limit poker is the best possible method of learning to take trading risk, short of actually sitting on a desk. Gus Hansen’s Every Hand Revealed presents a unique opportunity to look over the shoulder of a world-class poker player as he plays through five days of a major tournament. Hansen took detailed notes on each of the 329 hands he participated in during the tournament, including his risk/reward assessment, strategy, mid-hand decisions, and the ultimate profit or loss. The reader is able to follow along as Hansen works through 329 decisions under uncertainty, and in so doing provides a unique perspective on the cumulative effects and path dependence of trading/risk management decisions. It is fascinating to observe how Hansen’s decision calculus on the 190th hand (for example) is impacted by the considerations immediately relevant to the 190th risk/reward scenario and the cumulative information gained and psychological wear & tear accrued from hands 1 through 189. This is something not generally touched on in theoretical literature, but is very much a part of trading in the real world. Trading decisions are not isolated events that occur in a pristine intellectual vacuum, and every trader must find a constructive way to manage the ongoing process of operating in the market.

 

Please use the Contact form to forward any comments or suggestions for future posts. The author can also be reached at:

info@traderconstructionkit.com

Reading List for Aspiring Traders - Part 2

The first installment of the Best Books for Beginning Traders discussed five works that described what it means to be a participant in both early-stage and developed markets: Liar’s Poker, Bombardiers, Metal Men, When Genius Failed, and Rogue Trader. We now move on to practical texts that build on the foundations of option theory, technical analysis, and risk management initially covered in Trader Construction Kit

6.     Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull

It is difficult to overstate the importance of Hull’s Options, Futures and Other Derivatives, which is ironic, considering that it is generally referred to as “the bible” of the financial markets. Recently updated in a 9th edition, it is a big, imposing book that has evolved and expanded its scope considerably with each successive iteration. Option trading has a large and extremely complex body of theory, and can be an extremely daunting subject for the uninitiated. Trader Construction Kit presents an introduction to the basics of the options market, standard valuation models, Greek risk measurements, and provides a dynamic hedging example…and even that relatively condensed coverage necessitated by far the largest and most complicated chapter of the book. Hull’s text provides the most complete coverage of the topic available, and offers a clear, comprehensive treatment of the mathematics underlying derivative pricing models and the resulting risk metrics. It should be considered mandatory reading for prospective practitioners, particularly those interested in option-centric careers in derivative trading, transaction structuring, and complex deal origination. This is doubly true for a trader contemplating a customer-facing role at a bank, merchant, or asset management firm, where it is almost impossible to price and hedge deal flow without a solid understanding of option fundamentals.

7.     Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets: A Comprehensive Guide to Trading Methods and Applications by John J. Murphy

Technical analysis is the study of chart patterns as a window into market sentiment and trader psychology, and is an extremely polarizing concept in the industry. Some practitioners flatly refuse to acknowledge its predictive utility, while others exclusively employ pattern-based analysis of the market to generate trading strategies. I make the argument in Trader Construction Kit that a hybrid approach incorporating both fundamental and technical information sources is maximally effective, employing technical analysis to refine the trader’s view and provide perspective on the potential magnitude and direction of price responses to the evolution of the fundamental landscape. Technical analysis also has an extremely large body of theory, ranging from simple graphical tools to exotic, complex interpretation systems. I believe that the basic trend and pattern analysis techniques can be applied to any liquid product, regardless of market, and therefore have the most predictive utility. Murphy’s Technical Analysis is the benchmark resource for understanding the core concepts of trend, support, resistance, and pattern analysis. The main value in Murphy’s text resides in chapters 4 through 6, where he discusses the basic patterns common to all markets and gives clear, concise explanations of why they occur, their significance, and the implications for future price movements. Murphy’s book is also worthwhile for those who do not ever intend to employ technical analysis, but who will most certainly share the market with traders that are.

8.     Dynamic Hedging: Managing Vanilla and Exotic Options by Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Back in the dark ages, risk management was an obscure mathematical discipline exclusively practiced by bespectacled corporate drones and the sorts of people who excelled at competitively reciting the digits of Pi. Traders did not practice risk management, they practiced risk taking. They also generally worked in a pit, settled disputes with their fists,  and had very little use for more than two decimal places. This all changed in 1997, with the publication of Nassim Taleb’s groundbreaking text, Dynamic Hedging. Dynamic Hedging offered the first glimpse of Taleb’s pragmatic approach to trading risk management, in which market-facing practitioners must understand the limitations and idiosyncratic nuances of the tools and techniques they deploy, lest they be destroyed by ignorance or misplaced confidence. Be warned, Taleb asks a lot of his reader, presenting high-level information at great velocity, frequently with little preamble. Prospective readers should consider a warm-up lap through Hull’s Options, Futures and Other Derivatives to refresh their understanding of the basics of option theory and derivative math before attempting Dynamic Hedging.

In the final installment we will investigate five books that serve as an extended series of case studies, from which a novice can gain perspective on how traders interact with their markets. 

 

Please use the Contact form to forward any comments or suggestions for future posts. The author can also be reached at:

info@traderconstructionkit.com

Project to Print: CambridgeEditors Discusses Working on Trader Construction Kit

I was extremely fortunate to work with an outstanding group of editors and designers at CambridgeEditors while writing Trader Construction Kit. Dr. Harte Weiner, the founder and lead editor at the firm, has just published a blog post describing her perspective on the process, which can be found here:

https://cambridgeeditors.wordpress.com/2016/09/12/project-to-print-interview-with-author-and-client-joel-rubano/

Reading List for Aspiring Traders – Part 1

Trader Construction Kit was written as a response to a decade and a half of inquiries from frustrated junior colleagues, analysts, risk managers and support staff seeking the best book to learn how markets worked and how to develop the skills necessary to make the move onto the trading desk. Unfortunately, there was no one resource at the time, so I would cobble together a reading list of a dozen or so texts, a handful of magazine and journal articles, and a movie or three. Some were classics in the field, others somewhat more esoteric, but each illustrated a particular aspect of what it meant to be a successful trader (or, in some cases, an extremely unsuccessful trader). That same list can also serve as the logical extension of the material covered in Trader Construction Kit, building on the methodological framework and expanding the reader’s knowledge base.

The Best Books for Beginning Traders:

  1. Liar’s Poker: Rising Through the Wreckage on Wall Street by Michael Lewis
  2. Bombardiers by Po Bronson
  3. Metal Men: How Marc Rich Defrauded the Country, Evaded the Law, and Became the World’s Most Sought-After Corporate Criminal by A. Craig Copetas
  4. When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management by Roger Lowenstein
  5. Rogue Trader by Nick Leeson
  6. Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives by John C. Hull
  7. Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets: A Comprehensive Guide to Trading Methods and Applications by John J. Murphy
  8. Dynamic Hedging: Managing Vanilla and Exotic Options by Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  9. Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre
  10. Market Wizards: Interviews with Top Traders by Jack D. Schwager
  11. The New Market Wizards: Conversations with America’s Top Traders by Jack Schwager
  12. Charlie D. The Story of the Legendary Bond Trader by William D. Falloon
  13. Every Hand Revealed by Gus Hansen 

The first five books focus on what it means to be a trader, the next three build the technical skills necessary to operate in the market, and the final five act as an extended series of case studies on trading decisions.

Beginning with the first five experiential books:

1.     Liar’s Poker: Rising Through the Wreckage on Wall Street by Michael Lewis

Liar’s Poker has probably set more people on the path to the trading desk than any other book (it certainly did, in my case). Liar’s Poker is Michael Lewis’ first-hand account of his time on the New York and London bond trading floors at the legendary Wall Street bank Salomon Brothers in the late 1980s. It is by far the most accessible book on trading, providing a clear, accurate (if slightly dated) perspective on how bank trading floors operate and the types of people that inhabit them. It is also extremely funny. Liar’s Poker is a must-read, particularly for those not currently in the industry or who are unfamiliar with how trading desks function.

2.     Bombardiers by Po Bronson

Bombardiers is the fictional account of a group of bond salesmen at the San Francisco office of a global investment bank in the 1990s that are pushed to, and in some cases past, the breaking point by the stresses of the job. Bombardiers most accurately captures the frenetic feel and surreal insanity of a modern trading floor, and does so while managing to be funnier than Michael Lewis’ Liar’s Poker.

3.     Metal Men: How Marc Rich Defrauded the Country, Evaded the Law, and Became the World’s Most Sought-After Corporate Criminal by A. Craig Copetas

Metal Men is a relatively unknown book (which used to be all-but impossible to find) that offers a view into the rarely-seen world of commodity merchants operating in an early-stage physical market. The book takes place during the advent of the spot crude oil market in the 1960s and 70s, and offers a wealth of anecdotal information about illiquid, physical trading that is unavailable from any other source. Aspiring traders would do well to take note and apply the lessons to their job search, as developing markets offer some of the best conditions for job creation and rapid advancement, as well as presenting the smallest hill to climb in terms of the established knowledge base. (Note: Portions of Metal Men describe behavior that is clearly illegal, both at the time of its writing and in the current regulatory environment. My endorsement of the text does not extend to the morals and legal transgressions of the protagonist.)

4.     When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management by Roger Lowenstein

In the early 1990’s Long Term Capital Management was home to the most incandescently brilliant collection of bankers and traders ever assembled, deploying state-of-the-art trading technology to generate eye-popping returns and basking in the adulation and envy of pretty much, well, everyone. Then suddenly, impossibly, the firm imploded during a tumultuous six week period in 1994. Lowenstein’s book is a detailed account of the disaster, and a fascinating tale of hubris and poor risk management by a group of individuals that could have, and indeed should have, known much better.

5.     Rogue Trader by Nick Leeson

Rogue Trader is the autobiographical story of how Nick Leeson singlehandedly lost $1.4B via a series of ever-larger unauthorized speculative positions while running the Singapore trading operations of Barings Bank from 1992 to 1995. Though it is sometimes criticized as being an overly self-serving interpretation of events, it is worth reading as an examination of how pressure to perform can lead a seemingly normal, relatively grounded individual into a destructive spiral of illegal activity. It is also an interesting case study of how much an organization can collectively delude itself, ignore common sense, and bend its own rules to accommodate a star employee operating what appears to be an extremely profitable business.

In the next installment, we will explore a trio of more scholarly texts to build the knowledge base necessary to operate in the markets.

 

Please use the Contact form to forward any comments or suggestions for future posts. The author can also be reached at:

info@traderconstructionkit.com