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To: Robert Rose who wrote (57981)5/22/1999 10:56:00 PM
From: Bill Harmond  Respond to of 164684
 
You said it all, RR.



To: Robert Rose who wrote (57981)5/23/1999 3:52:00 AM
From: H James Morris  Respond to of 164684
 
>>Why, is your problem with them that they are off their highs??<<
Robert, my problem?? The only problem I have is trying to keep one of my daughters from buying these over-fed pigs.
Regards
Porkey



To: Robert Rose who wrote (57981)5/23/1999 1:38:00 PM
From: John Donahoe  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 164684
 
RE: to make out ahead by selling at the top and buying at the botton, I would only have 5% leeway at the top and the same at the bottom, and then I would just be breaking even. I admit to not being that good <g>.

For long term wealth creation you are absolutely right. But if you are a super market timer it is possible (but improbable) to become a billionaire.

Buffet is a classic buy and hold investor who built his fortune over time with a long term perspective. Jesse Livermore, OTH, made and lost fortunes several times and died broke.

Go to Lessons from Livermore:

businessweek.com

Snippet:

"Jesse had gone bankrupt at least three times before the 1929 crash. He put his last chips in during the early 1930s and was wiped out. He flitted around Wall Street for another ten years, trying to scare up another stake. Finally, near the wolf point, he tried to recoup by selling a book of his insights. When that failed too, he gave up, penned an eight-page suicide letter at the Sherry-Netherland Hotel, and blew his brains out in the hatcheck room in 1940."