Looking at how the "Walls Street Journal" is put together and revealing the personalities and corporate culture that make up the Wall Street institution, this book features a firsthand account of the "Heard On The Street" column scandal
After studying memoir writing in a workshop with Foster Winans, I naturally wanted to read his own memoir, Trading Secrets, about his life first as a Wallstreet Journal Columnist, one of the most highly respected journalist positions in the world. He chronicles his fall from grace, which reads like a detective story, as he turns his journalistic talents upon his own life. It is a wonderful cautionary tale showing the seduction that inside knowledge can have, especially for a young man who is looking for ways to please the rich and powerful. There are some fascinating psychological insights, not ones that you would read in a technical book, but the kind of psychology you find in a well told tale. In real life, Foster of course got out of jail, and brought his cautionary tale to others. I met him through a wonderful writing organization he started in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, (no longer in operation). His redemption for his sins was to give back to the community, and I am privileged to be one of the recipients of his generous service.
I read this book in the 80’s or early 90’s when I was bumming around bartending. I probably hadn’t read a book for fun since I was 12. It was easy to read and the language made the investing business easy to understand for the layperson.
Now I’ve been in the investment business for over 25 years. During the Covid-19 lockdown I remembered the name of the book and ordered it for a fresh read.
A true story about a journalist who violates his journalistic ethics to make a few bucks. Seems he was backed into a corner financially and the investment advisor involved ‘played’ him.