generated from coulomb/repo-seed
29 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
29 lines
1.8 KiB
Markdown
# Summary of Trading-Literature Source: I Part 6
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## Narrator's Actions and Market Reactions
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- The narrator interacts with Tom, marking tickets “Closed at 103” for seven shares.
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- The narrator reacts to market movements when Dave Wyman yells about Sugar reaching 108, indicating a run on the bucket shop.
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- The narrator comments on the market manipulation by noting the price drop following the peak.
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## Named Strategies, Instruments, Venues, and Institutions
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- **Strategies**: Market manipulation via bucket shop tactics and coordinated buying.
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- **Instruments**: Shares of Sugar and Western Union stock.
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- **Venues**: Bucket shops, New York Stock Exchange.
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- **Institutions**: Cosmopolitan bucket shop; Tom (an employee of the shop); Dave Wyman (ticker announcer); an unnamed New York operator.
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## Explicit Lessons, Rules of Thumb, or Warnings
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- A run on a bucket shop can be triggered by customer suspicion, similar to a bank run.
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- Bucket shops often manipulate stock prices to eliminate losing positions of their customers.
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- Unexplained sharp price drops followed by quick recoveries are indicative of bucket-shop drives.
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## Evidence Phrases
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- “six thousand shares of Sugar”
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- “$20,000 in Sugar margins”
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- “doubled-cross me” and “seventy thousand dollars” (gain from the intermediary operator’s manipulation).
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- Mention of "bought as much of a certain stock" and "sold at two points profit".
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- Reference to “the Bryan panic of ’96” for context on market events.
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## Ambiguities or Anachronisms
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- The identity of the unnamed New York operator and his specific techniques remains vague.
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- The transition from the operator's profitable ploy to his eventual obscurity lacks clarity—why he fell into obscurity is ambiguous.
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- The term "bucket-shop drive" may need explanation or may be outdated for contemporary readers. |