Épisodes

  • #2: How to Never Blow Up: Paul Tudor Jones
    Oct 30 2025

    This episode is about Paul Tudor Jones — the hedge fund legend who turned defense into an art form.

    He’s best known for predicting the 1987 crash and returning over 200% that year — but the real lesson from Jones isn’t how he made money, it’s how he kept it.

    What to expect in this episode:

    • How a boxer’s discipline became a trader’s edge
    • Why he says: “Don’t focus on making money. Focus on protecting what you have.”
    • The moral foundation from his Memphis upbringing that shaped his risk mindset
    • Lessons from Eli Tullis — the mentor who taught him composure under fire
    • The decision to quit a lucrative brokerage job because it “lacked accountability”
    • His 10% monthly drawdown rule — and why it keeps him in the game
    • The power of humility: “Every day, I assume every position I have is wrong.”
    • How he turned the 1987 crash into his defining moment
    • Why generosity and gratitude are essential to staying balanced in markets
    • The timeless truth: great trading is not about being right — it’s about not dying.

    Books & Resources Mentioned:

    • Market Wizards by Jack D. Schwager
    • Trading In The Zone by Jack Schwager

    Follow the Show:
    → Website: moneymenshow.com

    If this episode helped you think more like a survivor than a speculator, share it with one friend who loves the markets and making money

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    46 min
  • #1: The Greatest Speculator Of All Time: Jesse Livermore
    Oct 13 2025

    This episode is about Jesse Livermore. The most legendary trader who ever lived, and the man behind Reminiscences of a Stock Operator.

    He made $100 million shorting the 1929 crash (about $1.9 billion today), yet died broke just a decade later.
    Livermore’s life reads like a novel: ambition, obsession, and lessons written in blood.

    What to expect in this episode:

    • How Livermore discovered technical analysis before it even had a name
    • The boy who ran away at 14 to chase numbers on a ticker tape
    • Why he said: “The market does not beat them. They beat themselves.”
    • How he made his first fortune shorting the 1907 Panic — and his biggest one in 1929
    • The deadly enemies of every trader: ignorance, greed, fear, and hope
    • His rule for sitting tight — and why it’s harder than being right
    • How obsession turned from his greatest strength into his undoing
    • Why the game teaches you the game… and then breaks you

    “It never was my thinking that made the big money for me. It always was my sitting.” — Jesse Livermore

    Books Mentioned:

    • Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefèvre
    • How to Trade in Stocks by Jesse Livermore

    Follow the Show:
    → Website: moneymenshow.com

    If you got value from this episode share it with one friend who loves markets, history, or human psychology.

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    29 min