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1.76 MB

Extraction Summary

4
People
4
Organizations
1
Locations
3
Events
1
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Email or letter correspondence (page 2)
File Size: 1.76 MB
Summary

This document is the second page of a correspondence (likely an email) addressed to 'Jeffrey' from a self-described CFA candidate and prospective hedge-fund manager. The sender discusses the risks and mechanics of an algorithmic trading model, citing market volatility caused by events like Brexit, the 2016 Pound flash-crash, and the US elections involving Trump and Clinton. The sender outlines a minimum investment requirement of $10,000 and defines various technical trading terms for the recipient.

People (4)

Name Role Context
Jeffrey Recipient
Addressed in the P.S. section; receiving an explanation of algorithmic trading strategies.
Sender Author (Unnamed)
Identifies as a CFA Candidate and prospective algorithmic hedge-fund manager pitching a trading model.
Hillary Clinton Mentioned
Referenced regarding the FBI investigation renewal prior to U.S. elections affecting markets.
Donald Trump Mentioned
Referenced regarding election speculation affecting markets.

Organizations (4)

Name Type Context
FOX News
Mentioned as a source of market-moving news.
FBI
Mentioned regarding the investigation into Clinton.
CFA Institute
Implied via sender identifying as a 'CFA Candidate'.
House Oversight Committee
Source of the document release (stamped in footer).

Timeline (3 events)

2016
U.S. Elections
USA
Clinton Trump
June 2016
Brexit
UK/Global Markets
October 2016
Pound flash-crash
Global Financial Markets

Locations (1)

Location Context
Mentioned in the context of elections.

Relationships (1)

Sender Professional/Financial Jeffrey
Sender is pitching a trading algorithm and explaining financial concepts to Jeffrey.

Key Quotes (4)

"The only thing I can assure tell you (in my personal opinion) that $10,000 is a lowest safe responsible sum of money needed to operate with the model"
Source
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Quote #1
"As a CFA Candidate and a prospective algorithmic hedge-fund manager I cannot say investing even in T-Bills is 100% safe"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026012.jpg
Quote #2
"P.S. Jeffrey, I want to introduce you to some algorithmic trading concepts"
Source
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Quote #3
"Many got rich and many got poor for 120 seconds while in their sleep."
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,596 characters)

While this particular example above illustrates good results by the end of the day (+$7,848 and $1,600 maximum drawdown from starting balance), there are certainly markets situations that require large margins and can not be expected beforehand. These are usually terrorist attacks, sudden nature disasters, or even FOX News releasing FBI renewal investigation over Clinton and following speculation on Trump’s lead prior U.S. elections.
The Brexit day example is certainly a good case scenario for my algorithm. It provides algorithm with a large volatility and many profitable opportunities. However, there are other large one-side price movements in financial markets that can destroy not only my model, but many other trading strategies if wrong side position is held. In the last month financial markets experienced pound flash-crash in the middle of a random night. GBP/USD dropped for about 10 cents in 2 minutes and jumped back. Many got rich and many got poor for 120 seconds while in their sleep. The only thing that secures investments is responsible trading, which is placing stop losses and not risking more than some percentage per trade.
As a CFA Candidate and a prospective algorithmic hedge-fund manager I cannot say investing even in T-Bills is 100% safe and can only say currency trading involves high risk. The only thing I can assure tell you (in my personal opinion) that $10,000 is a lowest safe responsible sum of money needed to operate with the model where $5,000 is used for margin alone and $5,000 is set to be used as a bad case scenario expected drawdown value or a stop loss.
P.S. Jeffrey, I want to introduce you to some algorithmic trading concepts and terms needed to understand trading algorithms better.
• Algorithmic trading is highly dependent on statistics and averages over a long-term history.
• Drawdown – maximal losing dollar amount for open or closed positions from starting balance.
• Algorithm ceiling – largest amount of money an algorithm can work with (large trades can influence market conditions against an algorithm).
• Percentage of profit and loss trades: 53.99% profit and 46.01% loss trades this summer on a “back-test”
• Average profit trade: $20.74 this summer on a “back-test”
• Average loss trade: $14.13 this summer on a “back-test”
• Number of trades per time period: 45,221
P.P.S. Drawdown value for a condition where price goes down, my algorithm buys a long contract every minute and does not hold short contracts can be estimated in the Excel file attached to the email (Estimation of losing P&L).
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