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How Paul Tudor Jones categorizes trading strategies.

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 Jeff T., Technology and Business Development

 Thursday, April 2, 2015

At the 25th anniversary of the Nymex Crude Oil contract PTJ described how he categorizes trading strategies. http://jeffteza.com/paul-tudor-jones-4-ways-to-make-money/


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2 comments on article "How Paul Tudor Jones categorizes trading strategies."

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 Alex Krishtop, trader, researcher, consultant in forex and futures

 Friday, April 3, 2015



I don't know why my original comment got into a wrong discussion, so re-posting it here.

This classification, although in quite a simplified form, indeed covers most of possible viable trading strategies. However it has two noticeable flaws:

1. It lacks one important class: trading sentiment of certain groups of market participants.

1. Specialised knowledge of an instrument is overly simplified to only insider trading, stock picking or market making, while analysis of non-market professional information always delivers decent results, especially in commodities.

Also I would refrain from obsequious statements like "if it's good enough for PTJ it works for me" — one needs to have quite some infrastructure and/or capital to play games of arbitrage nowadays.


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 Jeff T., Technology and Business Development

 Tuesday, April 7, 2015



Good point on the comment re: trading sentiment Alex. I agree that sentiment is an important part of technical tool kits and personally use put/call ratios, and inter-market relationships to discern trading sentiment. I also agree that there is a pretty significant cost-of-entryfor arb trading,even just for stock pairs let alone the HFT stuff.

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TRADING FUTURES AND OPTIONS INVOLVES SUBSTANTIAL RISK OF LOSS AND IS NOT SUITABLE FOR ALL INVESTORS
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