
Market Wizards
by Jack D. Schwager
Amazon affiliate links. By using them, you support our free content at no extra cost to you.
The summary
Jack Schwager interviewed 17 of the world's most successful traders to find out what they actually have in common. Among them are Paul Tudor Jones, Ed Seykota and Richard Dennis, with approaches ranging from trend following to fully discretionary trading. Published in 1989, the book launched the Market Wizards series, through which Schwager has spent more than three decades documenting traders who have made money in the markets year after year.
The format is pure interview: each chapter focuses on one trader and lets them speak, with pointed questions about how they trade, how they handle losing streaks and how they arrived at their method. Schwager was a financial journalist before he managed money, and that background shows in how each conversation is structured without padding it with his own interpretation.
What stands out is that these 17 traders share no single system: some follow trends for weeks, others trade squarely against consensus, and at least one barely touches technical analysis. What they do repeat are certain risk management principles and a relationship with losing that differs sharply from the average trader's — they accept it as part of the job instead of denying it.
This is a book of interviews, not a manual, so do not expect a ready-made strategy once you close it. It works well if you want proof that there is no single valid path to trading consistently. If it hooks you, this catalogue also has The New Market Wizards, its direct sequel, and Unknown Market Wizards, the instalment most focused on anonymous retail traders.
About the author
Jack D. Schwager
American futures and hedge fund analyst and manager, known for his Market Wizards series of interviews with outstanding traders.
What You'll Learn
- That there is no single path to being profitable
- How traders with opposite styles manage risk
- The relationship with losing shared by consistent traders
- The difference between trend following and contrarian trading
- Why discipline matters more than any specific strategy
- Where the Market Wizards series began
Recommended For
- Traders who want to see different styles in action
- Beginners looking for perspective before choosing a method
- Readers who prefer interviews to technical manuals
- Anyone about to move on to The New Market Wizards
- All levels, more as background reading than a technical one
Details
- Published
- 1989
- Pages
- 486
- Publisher
- Valor Editions de España
- ISBN
- 9788494276842




