Famous investors such as Michael Burry were discovered there. You don’t have to participate, you can have a guest account with a delay on seeing new posts. There are some insightful comments that you can read as well.
Edit: you don’t have to create an account to view posts
In regards to personal discussion: bogleheads. Otherwise same principal as HN that as a community grows large, especially in finance or other trendy topics, the quality of discussion drops.
There are plenty of places you can find high quality financial content/discussions. Some have already been listed in this commect section.
With that said, the problem we have is not one of curation which is what HN or Reddit does. The actual problem is the lack of strcture and searchability/discovery. Even on HN once something fades off of the front page, it is lost forever.
Here is an idea I have been considering for some time now: Imagine a website where you get to input a stock ticker symbol and you get back a timeline (literally a zoomable timeline) with all major events related to that ticker on that timeline. Each event has relevant links/documents attached to it. That way you categorize all the necessary information related to a company from its inception until today in one single place.
Even if you're talking about general finance and not stocks or investment grade assets. The problem is the same. We have an ocean of content all over the place but no structured way of search or discover what we seek to know more about. So imo finding creative ways to structure the content is the problem to solve for.
Some very intelligent passive investors there. You can learn a lot about the details of different asset classes, optimal ETF choices and intricacies of them like securities lending, bond interest rates and duration, portfolio construction, market factor investing, research paper discussion on historical returns, reducing taxes, etc.
Not mentioned yet is http://elitetrader.com. There is a lot of crap but if you spend enough time to learn which posters are legit then you can really learn a lot. There is also like 20 years of history to look up in the forums if you are inclined.
I think twitter threads are what you're looking for. Find smart people like SBF of Alameda/FTX, they do tweetstorms (threads of tweets) every once in a while.
I used to be quite interested in finance or 'quant-finance'.
Besides from taking too many courses in analysis and 'applied' mathematics like stochastic processes, bayesian methods, SDE's, etc.
I have searched through a-lot of shitty Reddit forums and bad YouTube channels.
They are all bad, and no-one is actually doing anything.
Sometimes there is Kaggle-competition like this one [1] where people are actually doing something and not just implementing a naive Black-Scholes model in Python with toy data, but again, in my experience it all linear models that run in production.
Depending on where you live I think there is a much higher change connecting with other people with engaging in finance-clubs at your local university or maybe get an internship/job.
The only real value I have got out from searching/reading about (quant) finance is [2] A Man for All Markets: From Las Vegas to Wall Street, How I Beat the Dealer and the Market, but you can skip the 5 first chapters.
keep an eye out for quality forums, as well. I have been out of it for a long time, but on the quant side there was nuclearphynance.com and wilmott.com - I imagine there are less specialized forums with quality people out there somewhere.
I feel like this comment was made in jest, but before the GameStop event ruined WSB, it was easily my favorite place on the internet.
Some really smart people were posting really insightful things on a regular basis.
It was a meritocracy of sorts (either you can make money or you can't was the attitude).
It also featured a refreshingly irreverent attitude. A lot of the discourse was vulgar and highly inappropriate but most people involved simply didn't care.
Nowadays WSB is just endless Steve Buscemi-like "hello fellow apes", "such and such gonna moon boys" and talk of sticking it to "the hedgies". It's awful now.
Nobody knows what the fuck they are talking about and everybody ranging from Warren Buffett to Jimmy Buffett are just winging it.
Finance is essentially psychology with 6 months weather forecasting slapped on top of it.
It's way easier to predict the fate of the Universe trillions of years from now than it is to predict where Microsoft stock will sit 4 months from now.
This is very obviously wrong, but it is the conventional wisdom. Every time someone says something like this and mentions Jimmy Buffet you know they're just quoting some movie like Wolf of Wall Street.
Trading is a real job and the market is very inefficient. If you're too lazy to study it, you say things like what the GDC7 posted. It's pretty easy to predict Microsoft stock four months from now (it will probably be higher, but there's a small chance it will be lower), certainly easier than "the fate of the Universe trillions of years from now."
At the end of the day, trading is learning how to manage risk. What is Microsoft doing, how much is it likely to make, and will the macro environment support or suppress their strategy. Then you put on a trade to take advantage of this view. You may sometimes be wrong, but the idea is that over all of your decisions, you'll mostly be right and make more money than you lose.
Obviously everyone remembers the time a team of gifted nobel prize winning mathemeticians cracked the formula, managing risk better than anyone who had walked the earth before.
So magnificent were the gainz that they imploded under the weight of all their brilliance, and were bailed out with the help of the federal reserve.
With all due respect, you have no idea what you’re talking about. Your imagination of how this industry works is skewed.
It is amazing how many self-professed experts there are, without any professional or meaningful experience. And the confidence they have… Source: have been working professionally in trading for almost 24 years. Go unleash your attack dogs against me now. :)
P.S.: Since it’s “pretty easy” to predict MSFT for you, let me congratulate you in advance to your exorbitant returns of the near future. Soon, the world will know of you, the next Elon Musk.
I don't want to defend the comment you replied to, but there is obviously some nuance to the topic. Your comment makes it look like you're jumping right on the opposite side and have been rolling dice for 24 years. There is obviously some sort of substance in trading. To what degree, is the question here.
> There's also a lot more to finance than stock picking.
People aren't interested in finance because of the wonders of the Fed Repo plumbing mechanisms which Zoltan of Credit Suisse explain to all of us with his reports on a weekly basis.
Saying there's more to finance than stock picking is like saying there's more to poker than the actual game.
Sure somebody has to build the poker table and deliver it to the casino but that's not where the money is at.
People look at finance as a way to escape their mediocre lives, so stock picking it is, if it's not stock picking still it's some form of concentration bet.
There’s a story about two stock brokers walking down wall street, one of them spots something on the ground and goes: “Look, a hundred dollar bill on the ground!”, the other responds: “That’s impossible, if there was a hundred dollar bill on the ground, someone would have picked it up”
While it’s not possible to predict exact movements of stocks, that doesn’t mean that finance isn’t filled with situations where someone drops money on the ground. It never stays there for long because someone picks it up, but you’ll certainly never be the one picking up anything if you don’t look.
I still find it enjoyable to at least try to predict trends. But I agree some things like technical analysis are 100% BS.
for my feed of economy related tidbits try Financial Time Alphaville, it's free if you register:
https://www.ft.com/alphaville
I also listen to Bloomberg Odd Lots podcast - great episodes on nuances of supply chains recently
Rentech doesn't try to predict where MSFT stock will be according to fundamentals, they simply looks at every other data of interest which is not MSFT stock price and they speculate:
"MSFT stock is too high/low considering that such and such has just moved and according to historical trends when such and such moves, then MSFT stock moves too"
Of course i'm simplifying.
But nobody really knows what they are doing, they are excellent at sales, Soros has achieved the same results listening to his body aches, and Buffett of course not the same results on a YoY % basis but he is working with a much larger pool of money.
At the end of the day it's like people trying to extrapolate the secrets of longevity from diet and habits. That old french lady lived to 123 smoking a pack a day till she was 100. There is no reason or rhyme to extrme outliers.
The more simple and likely explanaition is that in a large enough dataset somebody has to be a positive outlier and it just happened to be those particular people with that particular personal/professional history, and people who are blinded by the $$ are trying to replicate their success by maniacally looking at their personal/professional history and copying it.
Unfortunately copying their personal/professional history won't also include copying the luck of the statistical outlier.
I think I understand your point and agree with the hype aspect, but statistically how can they be statistical outliers? On a broad annual basis they’ve beat everyone 10+ times in a row or whatever the number is. That’s far more than statistically significant. How can 1 fund beat 10,000s 10 times in a row and be just an “outlier” with no rhyme or reason to their performance? Please correct me if I’m misunderstanding.
The fact that it's statistically significant doesn't mean that the people involved in the event know what they are doing.
G-intense tasks or stuff that has a g-intense reputation is often put on a pedestal but it's essentially the same as asking Tom Brady why is he in the Super Bowl every year.
He'd answer something like teamwork, good work environment and hard work...which is the exact same stuff that Simons answers when he's asked about Medallion.
It's not like the both of them have really a clue. If they did, they'd be able to fail on purpose , get back being nobodies and then regroup and get back to the top again. Repeat the cycle 10-20 times to be sure about it.
Don't know about Brady, but Simons as a man of science would try if he was 100% really sure about what's the formula for success.
In reality , not only he doesn't do that, but he pulled the plug on Medallion in 2007 during the meltdown, it's in the book.
What you're saying really makes very little sense to me. The strategies change constantly and are arb'ed away. Every year they essentially do start from scratch, aiming to beat the market which they do massively. But they aren't starting from scratch because they're still using their statistical arbitrages and tools? That is the very method and "knowing what they're doing" that you're saying doesn't exist.
> The strategies change constantly and are arb'ed away
Don't strategies change constantly and are arbitraged away in the NFL too?
And yet Tom Brady is always in the Super Bowl and is on the record for never having a losing season and 3 distincitve Hall of Fame worthy carrers.
I insist on Tom Brady because you'd never say that he looks like he knows what he's doing, even though his numbers compared to peers are even more impressive than Simons'
That's because he doesn't look the part. He looks like the lucky jock, same thing with that French lady who lived to 123, she looks like the person who simply won the genetic lottery.
Simons "looks and feels" like the elder statesman math genius who knows what he is doing. In reality him (very much like the rest of us) can't even predict what thought will he have 10 seconds into the future, let alone predict if that thought will lead to a viable idea and if that idea will lead to a successful execution and if that execution will lead to a great result.
Again if he's confident that he knows the formula to reach extreme financial success, then why doesn't he proceed to make the experiment of going back to zero or negative net worth and then try to get to top of the Forbes list again? Every billionaire claiming that luck had nothing to do with their success should do this small experiment and repeat it 10 or 20 times, in order to back their claim.
In reality Simons is so sure of not knowing that he gets paranoid when a couple of weeks go by without Medallion making money, and if a week of intense bleeding happens he just pulls the plug on Medallion, like he did during the 2007 meltdown.
There is basically zero value in analysis of what just happened.
"and today on wall street ..." is backward looking and as relevant to the future as checking the last 10 results on the roulette table.
But it is a lot easier to sound like you know what you are talking about when you talk about what happened yesterday than talking about what will happen tomorrow.
It seems to me you are talking purely from a hedge fund kind of viewpoint. Of course they’ll be using primary sources of data with real time predictive value.
But for the layman outside of the industry or even someone trying to learn the ropes it’s useful? Also to get a conceptual understanding.
Is it useful to have a grounding in history of any subject, absolutely. It is no different from any other subject. Some are more helpful than not.
Reading The art of War or reviewing wartime procurement and supply chain management from the vietnam war are likely to help in times of war. Deep expertese based on the WW1 comprehensive guide to digging parallel trenches will probably be of no use when launching drones against the enemy.
The british army, based on all their experience, send troops off to the desert in iraq (iraq 1) with all the equipment they needed for what they saw yesterday - cool to cold northern european climates. Plenty of warm clothes and heavy black boots with soles that litterally melted on hot roads or sand.
Times change, some lessons are persitent, many are not. Some periods of history the lesson is "buy train stocks", more recent "buy tech stocks" and those from the turn of the century "do not under any circumstances buy tech stocks no matter how many people say it will keep going up forever".
Famous investors such as Michael Burry were discovered there. You don’t have to participate, you can have a guest account with a delay on seeing new posts. There are some insightful comments that you can read as well.
Edit: you don’t have to create an account to view posts