I just finish reading "The Greatest Trade Ever" last night. This is one of the many books that came out in the last few months about the great crash of 2008. It's about how a few investors, mainly John Paulson, foresaw the coming crisis and make profit from it.
The market always have different views. Otherwise there won't be any market if everyone had the same view. Therefore there always some guys who bet on the right side and make money.
So this was the assumption I had before reading the book. Thinking that it's just stories of the lucky guys who happened to be on the right side of the bet. After reading the book, my impression is that these guys were not just lucky. They were extremely lucky AND put in the hardwork to profit from it.
They were not the only people who saw things were going crazy at the time. In hind sight, even I saw it coming - all the big tycoons were placing shares which is a sure sign that even they thought the shares were over priced, and the many TV ads on Dish Networks telling people that anyone can get a loan or refinance, or my relative who saw her Manhattan apartment doubled in value in 5 or 6 years. However guys like me just sat on the sideline and waiting for the fireworks.
The people in the book, on the other hand, took the time to figure out how to profit from the coming crash. Seeing the big picture is one thing, developing a concrete plan of action is another. They did not get it right at the start. For example, they initially tried to short shares in financial companies or real estate related business. But shorting shares exposing one to unlimited downside. Then they found derivatives. Not simple puts, but CDS that's effectively insurance on the value of a particular securities. Initially their invested in CDS for particular mortgage related bonds, and later on CDS on the mortgage index that had proven to be the holy grail.
If I get the timeline right, this process took some of them 1 year or more to perfect. And then there was the problem of timing. Some of them acted too soon and had to wait two years before the housing price fell enough for the CDS to be worth anything. When the market crashed, many of them also had to resist the temptation from within and pressure from outside to sell too early to lock in profit. (In 1992 I read a book about the house of Nomura. One of the key events in its early history was shorting rice and had to wait two years before profits came in to bail them out and made them super rich. During the two years they had to tighten their belts and being ridicule at.)
So these people are not just lucky. You have to add some foresight, some courage, lots of perseverance & hardwork, plenty of greed & some craziness. At the end of the book, it says John Paulon's next big bet is against the US$ & many currencies except the Chinese Yuan. His instrument this time is gold.
According to the book, John Paulson made US$15 billion out of this mess. Since derivatives like CDS are zero-sum game, the people on the other size of his bets loss at least as much. And the losers were the houses of Bear Sterns, AIG, Citigroup, etc... who held on to the CDS on house accounts instead of selling to clients.
Now the big question - what's my plan to profit from the next big crash? or from the bubble that builds to the next big crash?