I recently reviewed the profiles of some of the best traders in the world, and I was surprised to see how many different strategies work when you really know what you're doing.



George Soros is probably the name that people recognize the most. What he did in 1992 against the Bank of England was almost legendary, making over a billion dollars in a single trade. His secret is in reading the global market and anticipating economic movements before everyone else.

But if we talk about consistency, Mark Minervini is on a different level. He won the US Trading Championship in 1997 with a 155% return, and then in 2021, he won again with 334.8%. It’s not luck; it’s pure technical analysis and pattern recognition. That kind of trader you see in movies really exists.

Jim Simons took a completely different path. As a mathematician, he developed sophisticated algorithmic models and managed to maintain an annualized return of 66% for 40 years. It’s the kind of approach you probably never see on social media because most people don’t understand how those algorithms work.

Ed Seykota was a pioneer in automating trading when almost no one was doing it. He achieved a 60% annualized return over 30 years by focusing on risk management and trend following. His philosophy is simple: let profits run and cut losses quickly.

And then there’s Ray Dalio with Bridgewater Associates, which is basically the world’s largest money-making machine. His long-term vision and risk management led him to build an empire. Interestingly, he has also invested fortunes in education and humanitarian aid, so it’s not all about accumulating wealth.

What all these have in common is that none of them became world-class traders by luck. Each developed their own system, tested it thoroughly, and executed it with discipline. That’s what really makes the difference in the markets.
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