| Jake Bernstein has a lousy record
trading futures—but has made plenty trading on investor
gullibility.
There's one born every
minute [By
William Green]
"I'M TEACHING YOU SOMETHING that I know works,"
says Jake Bernstein. "It's real simple." Bernstein, 51,
is in a Washington, D.C. hotel meeting room mesmerizing
an audience of aspiring futures traders.
Want to make a killing trading futures?
All you need to know, says Bernstein, is that many
seasonal price patterns occur year after year. Buy live
hog futures on Oct. 30 and sell on Nov. 27. That's a
trade that would have made you money almost every year
in recent decades, he claims. Bet on the S&P 500
March contract to rise from Jan. 12 through Jan. 18. For
15 years, he says, this trade was a winner 93% of the
time.
Does anyone believe his nonsense?
Unfortunately, yes. Intoxicated by the promise of easy
money, audience members line up to buy Bernstein's
products, among them his books, with titles like The
Seasonal Trader's Bible and The Best of Bernstein: A
Treasure Chest of Jake Bernstein's Market Wisdom.
His monthly newsletter costs $400
annually; his weekly newsletter costs $895 a year. He
sells three other newsletters, plus video courses and a
CD-ROM ($695) that lists 60,000 seasonal trades. He
offers telephone hot lines and charges up to $2,500 per
person for his two-day seminars.
Yes, you can fool some of the people
all of the time. Commodity Traders Consumer Report, a
respected futures publication, tracks the trades
Bernstein recommends in his $895 flagship newsletter. If
you had acted on these weekly tips from 1988 through
1992, you would have lost money for five consecutive
years (assuming typical transaction costs).
Let's say you set up a $20,000 trading
account in 1992 and executed the newsletter's
recommended trades for that year. Your account would
have been wiped out. In 1996 you would have lost 95% of
a $20,000 account. Bernstein's response: "There are
always losing periods."
He professes to be an expert on the
psychology of trading. His qualifications? In
registering with the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, the Montreal-raised Bernstein wrote that he
held a master's degree in psychology from Chicago's
Roosevelt University. In fact, he never completed his
master's studies.
In the 1980s Bernstein hooked up with
an outfit called Robbins Trading and helped to manage
futures accounts for investors. James Roemer, who
comanaged money with Bernstein, says: "Jake is
brilliant, but he can't manage money to save his life. .
. . He'd get scared, buy at highs and sell at lows. . .
. He kept losing money."
Bernstein found an easier way to get
rich. Instead of just trading futures he would trade on
investor gullibility. In 1996 he starred in an
infomercial that has aired on nearly 400 TV stations. It
hypes a video course ($180) called Trade Your Way to
Riches. In it a farmer named Harold Henkel tells viewers
how well Bernstein's approach has worked for him.
Henkel, however, now admits that he lost money trading
in 1996 and 1997 while using Bernstein's products.
On his Web site Bernstein offers to set
up customers with his "personal" brokers at Fox
Investments, a division of the Chicago brokerage firm
Rosenthal Collins Group.
Suppose you take Bernstein's
recommendation and set up an account at Fox with
$5,000—the minimum that Bernstein says you need to
become a trader. Your commissions would be $60 to $80
per trade, about three times more than savvy retail
customers pay. Bernstein's weekly newsletter offered 195
recommended trades last year. At that rate, a small
trader's commissions alone might amount to more than
double his or her original investment. Needless to say,
Bernstein receives a slice of the brokerage's
commissions. A Fox broker appeared in Bernstein's
infomercial, touting his seasonal trading approach.
Says Bernstein: "There's no arguing
with history." Say we: Where are the regulators when you
need them?
copyright 1998 Forbes
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