I just finished reading "When Genius Failed - the Rise and Fall of Long-term Capital Management" by Roger Lowenstein.
Assuming Lowenstein's descriptions are accurate, what a contrast in style from Ed Thorp's as described in the above attachments!
In the Genius book, the LTCM guys, especially the main trader Hilibrand, can be almost say to be a "Martingale Man" - he would redouble in the face of losses. And in many occasion, Long-term was say to be "betting the farm". This is a sharp contrast to Kelly Criterion based concept to scale back in the face of losses & diminishing edge. In the Ed Thorp articles, there were a number of occasions where Ed Thorp either turned down addition capital or reduce the capital, in order to maintain the edge.
In the Genius book, the LTCM guys repeatedly characterize their models as picking up nickels here and there (and later "picking up nickels in front of the bulldozer" when they got into merger arb.) From the description in the book, they were picking up nickels mainly in the sense that they were pickup the minor inefficiencies overlooked by others, but not really "here and there" in the sense of large number of mostly unrelated trades. So they were hoping to found a very large pile of nickels and sent in a large vaccum. Their vaccum was leverage - around 20 times in 'normal' time and up to 20 times right before the trouble. At that leverage, 3% drop in asset value would (and did) whip out the entire capital.
The Ed Thorp stat arb described in the above articles, seem to me more truely a "nickel sucking here & there" operation. See my comment 2 in the 1st post.
In the Genius book, Goldman was said to be transformed from a gentlemen investment banker to a predatory trader. It front-ran the LTCM book while discussing a rescue and "raped" LTCM, according to the LTCM partners. While reading this part, I cannot help but to compare the now famous
Goldman Sach high-frequency trading - perhaps by now the best known giant "nickel sucking" operation. From the public information, this strategy is compared to front running.
If front-running is so common-place & institutionalized, I am even more curious how Ed Thorp solve this problem (see 6 in my first post.)
BTW my comment regarding Long-term is perfectly aided by hind-sight. I am sure it was not entirely fair comment if made at the time of the event. But that's the fun of commenting on other's misfortune, in hinh-sight. Right?
(For my friends who are not entirely familiar with American English, nickel = US 5 cents coin, penny = US 1 cent coint, dime = 10 cents.)