How I Got Fired Every Day From the Same Job

Palm Beach Daily

Chaka’s Note: Regular readers know we like to pass along insights from brilliant investors and traders around our network. People who can have a significant positive impact on your wealth…

Today’s feature is no different. The author of today’s essay, Larry Benedict, had a 21-year win streak when he was actively running hedge funds – from 1990 to 2011 (that’s through TWO major bubbles and busts)…

He’s been called a “Hedge Fund Market Wizard” by some… for his uncanny ability to predict short-term market moves.

On Wednesday night, Larry’s holding a free Trade-a-Thon to show you how his trading system works. During the event, Larry says he’ll generate $70,000 in less than a day in the markets. And if he wins… all of the money goes to a local charity.

It’s the same strategy he says you can use to generate $200,000 or more over the next 12 months. In the meantime, we’re running a special evening series to prepare you for his event. You can sign up for it right here

How I Got Fired Every Day From the Same Job

By Larry Benedict, editor, The Opportunistic Trader

The year was 1984, and I had just started my trading career.

I worked as a runner, and a clerk, in the pits at the Chicago Board Options Exchange. And it was there that I learned the first, most fundamental rule of being a successful trader.

As a clerk back then, you would answer phones, write orders, and run the orders out to the pit to execute them. And then, you’d get back on the phone and report the fill to the customer.

When I first started, I was getting trained by another clerk who worked for my boss. My boss was a big-time trader. And the clerk who was training me said something strange…

“Look, you’re going to get fired every day. But don’t listen to it. Come back tomorrow and everything will be fine.”

I’m originally from New York. And here I was… 21 years old, in a new city where I didn’t know anyone, and I knew absolutely nothing about my job. Not to mention, I’m being told I’ll get fired every day. 

I also didn’t know the ins and outs of working on a trading floor. I was expected to know what I was doing. But I knew nothing about trading, period. And on the first day, I got thrown right into the fire.

My boss was giving me hand signals for which trades to do from the pit, but I was clueless. They gave me a sheet with all the hand signals, but it was like having to learn sign language in minutes… I’d look up at the screens with the current stock prices, and it just looked like scrolling gibberish.

He really needed someone with much more experience than I had.

Inevitably, I messed up an order and my boss went ballistic. He told me I was an idiot and didn’t know what I was doing, and he fired me.

So of course, I’m freaking out. I call my mom and tell her, “Mom, I just got fired. But they told me I’ll get fired every day and to just keep coming back.”

And she goes, “Well, just do what they say then!”

So I go back in the next day, and I’m there early. My boss walks in and he’s got a cup of coffee and a bag of McDonald’s, like everything is normal. He starts asking me what I did last night, and is in a normal, upbeat mood.

It was crazy. Everything really was fine.

The next day came around, and he asked me a question about adding fractions together. I didn’t know the answer, so I guessed.

Bad move. I guessed wrong. Then he went ballistic and fired me again.

Suffice to say, it was a high-strung and high-intensity environment. And as miserable as it was doing that every day, getting fired and coming back with my tail between my legs, I kept coming back.

Not a lot of people are built to handle that kind of environment. But you learn that way. You get knocked down and get back up, every single day.

That’s what my boss was trying to teach me, in his own strange way. And it’s a lesson every new trader needs to learn.

No matter how many times you fail… lose money… “get fired,” so to speak…

You have to get up, dust yourself off, and try again. That’s the only way to learn and improve.

It’s easy to get discouraged, especially when money’s on the line. But if trading were easy, everyone would do it and everyone would be rich.

Maybe the advice to “never give up” is something of a cliché.

But that cliché is the reason why I turned that first job into a 35-year trading career, making millions along the way.

And if you want to be a successful trader, you must follow it.

Regards,

Larry Benedict
Editor, The Opportunistic Trader

P.S. After 35 years quietly trading for hedge funds, I’m coming forward now because I believe anyone can use what I’ve learned to become a trading success.

Because it doesn’t matter if you’re wealthy or not-yet wealthy… young or old… a Wall Street vet or a complete novice. Using these principles is what generates success.

In my exclusive tell-all presentation on Wednesday night (sign up for free right here), I’ll walk you through how each of these principles contributed to my success – leading me from the bottom rung of Wall Street to managing hundreds of millions of dollars.

When you attend, I’ll even supply a copy of my Foolproof 50 – my personal list of the 50 best securities to trade in the market – to help get you started. Secure your spot right here.


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