Robin Hood was a Trader

Par : Benoist Rousseau
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  • Nombre de pages84
  • PrésentationBroché
  • FormatGrand Format
  • Poids0.123 kg
  • Dimensions13,5 cm × 21,0 cm × 0,6 cm
  • ISBN979-10-91879-68-2
  • EAN9791091879682
  • Date de parution08/06/2019
  • ÉditeurJDH Editions

Résumé

The term "trader" comes from the English word "trade" which means "exchange, commerce". A trader is an individual who trades financial products on behalf of a bank or brokerage firm. His job is to buy and resell, buy and resell, to infinity and often in a very short time. In fact, the author is not a trader working for an institution but rather for his own account. He clearly differentiates between these two major categories of traders.
Through a narrative, a kind of written short-movie recounting of a real scene, Benoist Rousseau explains how, by going to a simple neighbors' party in France, he could be stigmatized and cause questioning or rejection as soon as he presents himself as a trader. This stigma is often due to people's lack of knowledge regarding the profession of a trader. It is through crisp dialogues and with a dose of humor that Benoist Rousseau, explaining his daily trader life, his way of life in opposition to the social norm, comes to the simultaneously provocative but unstoppable conclusion that a trader working for his own account is actually a Robin Hood.
The term "trader" comes from the English word "trade" which means "exchange, commerce". A trader is an individual who trades financial products on behalf of a bank or brokerage firm. His job is to buy and resell, buy and resell, to infinity and often in a very short time. In fact, the author is not a trader working for an institution but rather for his own account. He clearly differentiates between these two major categories of traders.
Through a narrative, a kind of written short-movie recounting of a real scene, Benoist Rousseau explains how, by going to a simple neighbors' party in France, he could be stigmatized and cause questioning or rejection as soon as he presents himself as a trader. This stigma is often due to people's lack of knowledge regarding the profession of a trader. It is through crisp dialogues and with a dose of humor that Benoist Rousseau, explaining his daily trader life, his way of life in opposition to the social norm, comes to the simultaneously provocative but unstoppable conclusion that a trader working for his own account is actually a Robin Hood.
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