Everybody loves lists so why not a list of the 10 greatest trades of all time?
Rather than focus on people who bought a stock and watched it zoom up 100 fold, the compiler of this list -- International Business Times -- focused on a "style of trading that's best described as making huge, concentrated bets by analyzing fundamental economic/business conditions. Most (but not all) of these trades can be labeled as 'global macro.'"
Whether they were lucky or brilliant (or a combination of both), these folks made a bundle of money from their best trades. Here they are:
1. John Paulson's bet against subprime mortgages (his fund made $15 billion just in 2007 from this trade).
2. Jesse Livermore's call on the Crash of 1929 (a legendary trader and the subject of the highly popular book, Reminiscences of a Stock Operator).
3. John Templeton's foray into Japan in the 1960s (a true investment industry pioneer, Templeton foresaw the rise of Japan after World War II and profited enormously from it).
4. George Soros' breaking of the Bank of England in 1992 (the Bank of England blinked and Soros made $1 billion).
5. Paul Tudor Jones' shorting of Black Monday in October 1987 (he correctly predicted the crash, bet a bundle, and tripled his money as the market crashed 22% in one day).
6. Andrew Hall's $100 oil prediction (with oil trading at $30 per barrel in 2003, Hall made a big bet that prices would rise to $100 within five years; they did and he took home a personal paycheck of $100 million in 2008).
7. David Tepper's 2009 bet on financials (as the market hit its low in early 2009, Tepper boldly bought financial services stocks and his fund earned $7 billion that year -- and a cool $4 billion of that went to Tepper).
8. Jim Chanos' prescient shorts (his sharp analysis led him to predict the demise of Enron, WorldCom, and other firms, and he is known as the best short-seller in the world).
9. Jim Rogers' early call on commodities (he was bullish on commodities back in the 1990s and has been riding them to great profits ever since).
10. Louis Bacon's geopolitical play (he correctly predicted that Saddam Hussein would invade Kuwait in 1990 and profited handsomely by going long on oil and shorting stocks, which helped his fund return 86% that year).
While these are the types of trades that make the headlines, you never hear about the other investors who made a big call and missed, and ended up out of business. Rather than trying to throw a touchdown pass on every play and make a "big score" like these traders, we focus on trying to get consistent first downs. Do that and the score may take care of itself.