00:00:10
Wall Street takes the brightest people and
smashes them into the pavement on a regular
00:00:15
basis.
00:00:17
There’s only one bottom line on Wall Street
and that bottom line is how much money you
00:00:23
make.
00:00:25
This is one of the most stressful jobs on
earth.
00:00:30
You have stress every single second.
00:00:32
Not everybody can survive.
00:00:34
Arrogance, greed, corruption - these are all
traps when you work on Wall Street.
00:00:44
Whatever your background was – it’s can
you make money?
00:00:48
Can you contribute to profitable ideas?
00:00:51
GUY DeCHIMAY Hedge Fund Manger:
You should wake up in the morning with an
00:01:12
immediate feeling of dread no matter what
and that is simply because if you know what
00:01:17
you’re doing, you realize that it might
really be fleeting.
00:01:21
Being a woman on Wall Street, I think it has
it’s good parts and bad parts.
00:01:26
Oftentimes you still feel it’s a little
bit of a boy’s network.
00:01:30
Sometimes you’re not being taken as seriously
because you wear a skirt and makeup.
00:01:36
There are two major things in Wall Street
on how to make money.
00:01:42
The first is mind your own business and the
second is discipline.
00:01:50
A lot of our clients look to us to make them
money but also to be something of an insurance
00:01:54
policy if the market really gets nasty.
00:01:58
Yesterday the market was nasty and we had
a very good day.
00:02:03
There are two numbers I don’t think I’ll
forget.
00:02:06
One is 15 and that is the age that I moved
out of my parent’s house.
00:02:11
The other is 27 and that’s the age I retired.
00:02:15
It’s about making money but you have to
have discipline, you have to be clairvoyant,
00:02:21
you have to be obsessed and fearless.
00:02:26
When Guy was managing money in a loft in SOHO
he was knocking it out of the park and no
00:02:31
one knew he existed and now he has an office
in a mid-town hi-rise and his performance
00:02:37
has been off the charts, putting in the top
5% of managers.
00:02:42
We are investors in U.S. equities only and
we are a long shore fund which means we are
00:02:49
basically making bets, if you will, on stock
prices going up and stock prices going down.
00:02:55
We trade for both our personal equity as well
as that of institutional funds and high network
00:03:02
investors.
00:03:03
Alrighty, we’ve got a lot of money to put
to work so we’re going to put some of it
00:03:07
to work today.
00:03:08
I have always worked on getting one degree
upon another to show that I’m actually well
00:03:14
accomplished.
00:03:15
I did feel under pressure to prove that.
00:03:19
You have to have a certain resilience for
Wall Street.
00:03:23
It gets stressful here usually around the
open - which is at 9:30 Eastern time.
00:03:29
There’s usually some information that has
come to light over night.
00:03:34
Mitchell.
00:03:35
What?
00:03:36
Are you going to be good in school today?
00:03:40
Yes.
00:03:41
You sure?
00:03:42
Yes.
00:03:43
And what are you going to do?
00:03:44
I’m going to learn things.
00:03:45
Do you want to be like our dad – a day trader?
00:03:46
Yes, I want to get a million dollars.
00:03:50
You want a million dollars?
00:03:52
Yes.
00:03:53
That’s a good one.
00:03:54
How about two million?
00:03:55
Oh, oh.
00:03:56
There’s five million
00:03:57
Five million?
00:03:58
Ok.
00:03:59
But you know what needs to be done in order
to make this kind of money, right?
00:04:02
I’m thinking.
00:04:03
It’s actually very simple.
00:04:06
You gotta start in high school and have good
grades and then try to go to college.
00:04:13
And then hopefully you’ll get a good job
and work long hours…
00:04:16
Yeah.
00:04:17
And then you’ll be better than anyone else.
00:04:18
It’s the same as in trading – what your
daddy do .
00:04:24
Alex came to the country about 10 years ago
and he had a degree in Finance from Moscow.
00:04:29
His dream was to work on Wall Street and he
found out very early on that his degree wasn’t
00:04:34
worth anything in the U.S. He felt that he
could beat the market.
00:04:39
Seven years later and no losing months, he
is on his way to becoming a star.
00:04:45
Alex hasn’t had a losing month since 1999
00:04:48
It’s right here.
00:04:49
The New York Stock Exchange.
00:04:51
JILL:
There’s a cliché.
00:04:52
You eat what you kill, and that’s very much
the culture of Wall Street.
00:04:58
Waking up and feeling like you’re on a hunt.
00:05:02
SANDY:
I work for an asset management company that
00:05:06
has about 6 billion dollars under management.
00:05:07
I have to be at work at 8 o‘clock and be
pretty much bright-eyed and bushy-tailed because
00:05:15
I cover European markets.
00:05:17
By the time that I get to the office, they
are just coming back from their lunch break.
00:05:21
PARKER:
Hey Christina, the coffee machine has gone
00:05:27
wacko.
00:05:28
You’ll find no quarter in the coffee machine.
00:05:30
My title – uh, President, we’re not big
on titles here.
00:05:36
CHRISTINA (Chief Operating Officer):
Parker is, uh, he runs the show and then Mike
00:05:39
is the analyst and pretty much anything that
Parker wants done I execute.
00:05:43
MIKE (Analyst):
I analyze primarily bio-tech companies that
00:05:46
research and develop pharmaceuticals.
00:05:47
PARKER:
Hey, Mike.
00:05:48
MIKE:
Yeah?
00:05:49
PARKER:
Gotta second on IE?
00:05:53
As a hedge fund we can do things that your
traditional mutual fund can’t do - we can
00:05:57
use leverage if we want to.
00:05:59
At a dollar?
00:06:01
I mean, fuck.
00:06:03
Also, we can short sell which means you are
betting on the security price going down.
00:06:10
Hey, Christina, short 10,000 (BLEEP).
00:06:11
Leverage: using borrowed money to increase
potential return
00:06:12
Short sell: Selling borrowed stocks high,
buying them back and returning them low, and
00:06:13
pocketing the difference
CHRISTINA:
00:06:14
Can you please short 10,000 (BLEEP) for me?
00:06:15
PARKER:
The risks associated with a short are much
00:06:18
higher.
00:06:19
If you’re going short a 100 dollar stock,
the most you can make is 100 dollars and the
00:06:25
most you can lose is infinite.
00:06:27
So, it’s a little bit more intense emotionally
and that’s why a lot of people don’t like
00:06:34
the business.
00:06:36
PARKER:
Technically Wall Street is a street down in
00:06:39
southern Manhattan.
00:06:40
On the corner of Wall Street and Broad is
the New York Stock Exchange.
00:06:43
But what is Wall Street in the more figurative
sense, it’s the biggest financial market
00:06:49
in the world.
00:06:51
The siren song of money can get so alluring,
it’s highly competitive with extraordinarly
00:07:01
intelligent people.
00:07:02
SANDY:
There’s a lot of competition and you need
00:07:05
to do everything to stay ahead of the pack.
00:07:07
GUY:
Out of 21 months, we’ve had one down month
00:07:09
and we would like to not have any more down
months.
00:07:12
ALEX:
For me, this is a 24-hours-a-day job.
00:07:15
I can not come home and say to my wife “this
month I did not make money”.
00:07:18
PARKER:
I’m hear to make money.
00:07:20
Let’s be real straight about this.
00:07:22
GUY:
It’s the holy grail.
00:07:24
How do you take the lowest risk and get the
highest return?
00:07:28
BOB (Floor Trader):
We’re here at the American Stock Exchange
00:07:37
where in 1987, as everyone knows, the market
crashed.
00:07:41
On that Monday afternoon, as I was standing
doing my job in one of the training pits you
00:07:44
see below me, one of the brokers who was trying
to get the attention of another broker actually
00:07:49
bit me in the shoulder because I was in his
way.
00:07:51
I stood there stunned.
00:07:53
It’s a true story.
00:07:56
The Hamptons
RICHARD (Manager Acquisition):
00:07:59
It’s one of the hardest things for me to
explain - what I do.
00:08:04
I represent on one side some of the richest
investors on the planet and on the other side
00:08:10
we try to find undiscovered managers who we
hope will be the next super star.
00:08:16
It’s an art discovering some of these managers
because, for the most part, they like to remain
00:08:23
below the radar.
00:08:25
I would say 9 out of 10 are going to fail.
00:08:28
CHRIS:
This is all we’ve got so far that we’ve
00:08:31
got over on the short side.
00:08:32
GUY (Hedge Fund Manager):
Well, that’s not enough.
00:08:34
Basically, I sit down with my trader and we
go through – what do we have in the book?
00:08:38
And, what do we think we’re going to need
to do today?
00:08:42
Do we want to add to positions?
00:08:43
Do we want to cut positions?
00:08:44
CHRIS (Senior Trader):
We want to wait on the positions of these
00:08:46
two, right?
00:08:47
GUY:
We want to wait for them to open and stabilize
00:08:49
at a tempting target but we’ve been burned
too badly on those two in the past.
00:08:53
Guy decides on the strategy and Chris executes
it
00:08:54
CHRIS:
Ok, let’s hold off on those.
00:08:55
GUY:
So, it is a “no go” for the moment.
00:08:58
Now here on the other hand, check our stock
on that and see whether or not.
00:09:02
We can’t.
00:09:03
Yeah, no, we have to high of an exposure?
00:09:05
That’s fun.
00:09:06
It’s always something, isn’t it?
00:09:08
There is a lot of risk in the market right
now so we’re going to be very, very careful
00:09:13
about what we do.
00:09:14
CHRIS:
If I can talk to trading and penetrate them
00:09:16
and guide them as I’m doing it as well.
00:09:17
GUY:
No, the way to do it is to open and stabilize.
00:09:20
We’ve got two minutes.
00:09:21
You’ve got enough bid here for the time
being.
00:09:23
We can ease our way into all of it.
00:09:26
The markets open.
00:09:27
What’s gonna happen is we’re going to
have a flood of orders.
00:09:31
Anybody who was short yesterday and thought
they were going to have follow through might
00:09:34
be nervous though what you end up with is
a very funky move in the beginning of the
00:09:40
day.
00:09:41
You see that reprice right now?
00:09:43
It’s all over the place.
00:09:46
You want to get in and get those positions
on.
00:09:47
It’s at the flat line right now.
00:09:49
9:30 A.M.
00:09:50
Reprice: stock options of corporate executives
being exchanges to the current market price
00:09:51
RICHARD:
When Guy’s working on a trade, you’ll
00:09:53
never get his attention.
00:09:54
He just has laser focus and he’ll remain
in these positions until he takes his pound
00:09:59
of flesh out of the market.
00:10:00
GUY:
Hold ‘em.
00:10:01
CHRIS:
Ok.
00:10:02
JILL (Analyst – retired):
All retiring means is that you don’t have
00:10:07
to work and the secret to that is creating
enough assets for you to support yourself.
00:10:14
I worked at a consumer sector focus fund.
00:10:18
I love to meet with the managements of the
companies, build financial models, analyze
00:10:22
their businesses and pick stocks.
00:10:24
Ok, I’m going to get them both.
00:10:26
Right now I’m in the process of starting
my own hedge fund.
00:10:29
To start a hedge fund, there’s a lot that
has to happen.
00:10:32
You have to have a strategy and you basically
have to build a team before you’re in business.
00:10:37
Day 1 and investor gives you money, they expect
you to start performing Day 2.
00:10:40
Jill retired six months ago
Jill now spends her time investing her money
00:10:41
Jill made most of her money in restaurant
and gaming stocks
00:10:42
PARKER:
Another guy resigned.
00:10:43
MIKE:
The Board ousted the primary CEO.
00:10:44
PARKER:
The mad scientist.
00:10:45
Short sellers often look for companies that
have problems and bet against them
00:10:48
MIKE:
The mad scientist.
00:10:49
PARKER:
Right now we are pausing on acting because
00:10:51
we’re worried about the new guy’s resignation
CHRISTINA:
00:10:55
Ok, I’ll tell you might big pet peave.
00:10:56
It’s like when you are a company, you’re
trying so hard to, let’s say, you’re making
00:11:01
a product and then you see how all of the
analysts are betting on whether or not the
00:11:05
company’s going to do right or wrong.
00:11:06
I’d rather be the company who’s actually
making something than being the weaselly analyst
00:11:10
who’s actually predicting whether or not
something is going from A to B. And I don’t
00:11:15
want to say weaselly.
00:11:16
Ok, maybe take out weaselly.
00:11:17
Yeah, sometimes I feel that it’s more honest
to be the – honest is not the great word
00:11:21
– scratch all that – scratch, scratch.
00:11:23
I’d rather be the person who’s actually
making it happen versus you betting whether
00:11:26
or not something is going to go up or down.
00:11:27
PARKER:
There is a nepharious image that short sellers
00:11:30
are betting on destruction and loss of wealth
and we don’t want to have people profitting
00:11:36
from other people’s loss.
00:11:37
There are some countries that don’t allow
short selling.
00:11:40
France, you can’t short sell in France.
00:11:43
I think that’s really short-sided.
00:11:46
Short selling serves a really important public
purpose.
00:11:51
Short sellers are often ferreting out information,
uh, that companies are trying to hide.
00:11:56
What’s the deal with (BEEP) on the late
filing?
00:11:59
It’s just their slow?
00:12:02
Who’s the CFO there?
00:12:04
And you think he’s competent?
00:12:06
A healthy market is one where in information
is broadly disseminated and honestly disseminated.
00:12:13
There’s a shadenFreud also to Wall Street,
even among so-called friends, it’s only
00:12:19
the Germans who can really come up with this
word.
00:12:23
It’s the joy and revelment of seeing somebody
else fail.
00:12:27
Short sellers were blamed for the crash of
1929
00:12:28
Short sellers helped expense the Enron scandal
SANDRA (Lawyer/Deal Maker):
00:12:30
This is Sandra, can I please talk to Carl?
00:12:32
I just got a call from a client.
00:12:34
Hold on one second please.
00:12:36
(SPEAKS GERMAN) I was born in Germany in a
small town, a middle-class family as a daughter
00:12:44
of an Iranian father and German mother.
00:12:46
(SPEAKS GERMAN) And nothing ever indicated
that I would actually make it to New York
00:12:52
City down the road because it’s really a
long shot, especially considering that I studied
00:12:56
law, but it was always my dream to one day
make it to the United States.
00:13:01
You know the morning passes very quickly.
00:13:03
I get a lot of phone calls, e-mails.
00:13:06
Most of them I tend to um answer right away,
and to get them out of the way.
00:13:10
“To be able to increase or leverage, be
a little more aggressive.”
00:13:15
I help make deals.
00:13:16
We raise capital from primarily institutional
investors and then we structure funds, put
00:13:24
that money in there and we manage it for them.
00:13:26
A fund is kind of a shell of where the securities
are being put into.
00:13:31
I mean the minimum is going to be $50 million
and we want to ramp up pretty quickly up to
00:13:36
$250, $500.
00:13:39
Some deals are really sexy.
00:13:40
Sometimes, it’s exciting to close the deal.
00:13:42
A lot of energy and testosterone comes together.
00:13:45
Ever so often though, you want to feed your
mind with some other stuff to maintain and
00:13:50
expand other dimensions.
00:13:51
For instance, I took up a quantum physics
in my spare time.
00:13:57
It’s for non-scientists though.
00:13:59
It’s not mathematical, but it’s very interesting
and you know, if you work on Wall Street it
00:14:05
can tend to be a little one-sided and so you
want to feed your brain something else for
00:14:10
a change.
00:14:11
Institutional Investor: organizations (such
as pension funds) that trade stocks in large
00:14:12
quantities
RICHARD:
00:14:13
It’s interesting that we’re all working
with the same data.
00:14:14
We all have the same earnings, forecasts reports,
but the incredible thing about Alex is.
00:14:21
He reads the way the market interprets that
data.
00:14:25
He gets in synch with the market.
00:14:26
ALEX (Day Trader):
At the age of 22, I came to the United States.
00:14:30
First three years I spent as a cab driver.
00:14:32
Then I got into the Wall Street, got my licenses,
and became a day trader.
00:14:38
How I make my money, I do a lot of charts.
00:14:41
I probably go through 700 to 800 charts.
00:14:44
Did they go up?
00:14:45
How did they finish?
00:14:46
This one happened to go (point at upward curve
on chart on monitor) – it was a huge turnaround.
00:14:50
So what I will do, I will by a basket of gold
and steel and see what it’s going to do.
00:14:55
Nicky, what’s up?
00:14:56
We probably do 500 to 1,000 trades a day.
00:14:59
We care what’s going to be in the next 30
seconds, a minute, 2 minutes and a variety
00:15:03
of different intervals.
00:15:05
And there’s maybe 10,000 people like we
are.
00:15:07
So figure out every time I’m by the computer,
I’m competing against a person like me.
00:15:12
If you made money today, somebody else has
lost it.
00:15:13
Day traders can pay large commissions for
executing so many transactions in a day
00:15:14
ALEX:
I’m looking to get in.
00:15:17
ALEX:
Probably would make much more money than I’m
00:15:19
making right now but taking much more significant
losses and be more volatile – probably be
00:15:24
up $10,000, be down $10,000 – but this is
not my style.
00:15:29
Every month you have to be up, you have to
get a paycheck.
00:15:32
All of this is about $2 million shares.
00:15:34
It’s going to be a nice come back.
00:15:37
This is a fast-making decision.
00:15:39
This is like a police, you either take a shot
or you’re gonna get shot.
00:15:42
Day traders buy here; sell there.
00:15:44
Hedge funds buy here, try to sell here.
00:15:47
Big investment, buy here; hold to sell there.
00:15:49
But we’re all here for the same.
00:15:54
This is our job.
00:15:55
Buy low; sell high.
00:15:56
It is estimated that 80-90% of day traders
lose money
00:15:58
Day trading can be mentally and psychologically
challenging due to split-second decision making
00:16:01
PARKER:
Aahha.
00:16:02
I see somebody got this thing to work.
00:16:03
There are things that I really like about
Wall Street and there are things that I really
00:16:07
don’t like about Wall Street.
00:16:08
The great thing about it, it really is a melting
pot.
00:16:11
There is ameritocracy to it.
00:16:13
Maybe that’s too big a word.
00:16:16
But it’s based off of merit usually.
00:16:19
He changed his name to inherit money.
00:16:22
Oh my God, the shame of it.
00:16:25
What I don’t like about Wall Street is there’s
too much of an urgency on this exact moment.
00:16:35
Whipping in and out of stocks; pace it a little
bit more.
00:16:39
This is a marathon; not a bunch of win sprints.
00:16:42
ANDREW BARBER (Writer, “Trader Monthly”):
On Wall Street, there are two different sides
00:16:49
of the street.
00:16:50
There’s the buy side and the sell side.
00:16:51
The difference really is easy to understand.
00:16:53
If you’re on the sell side, you’re angry
at the guy you’re talking to, you have to
00:16:57
slam down the phone before you say “fuck
you”.
00:16:58
If you’re on the buy side, you get to say
“fuck you”, then hang up the phone.
00:17:04
GUY:
Patience.
00:17:07
Patience is what counts here.
00:17:08
Gotta be able to take advantage of that dip
a little bit.
00:17:11
Hey Chris, I want you to hold on that Apple
trade.
00:17:14
We’ve got three minutes.
00:17:16
This is like being an air traffic controller
at times.
00:17:20
It is as stressful as it comes.
00:17:22
You might think you are on to something – 4
percent so instead of 5 percent.
00:17:25
CHRIS:
Gotcha.
00:17:26
GUY:
Then it starts moving away from you.
00:17:28
It’s going to find it’s line at 150.
00:17:30
You’re not in control of the information.
00:17:31
You’re not in control of the market.
00:17:33
CHRISTINA:
It’s much like an ER so you never know what’s
00:17:37
going to hit you.
00:17:38
If the timing is right, everything will happen
at once.
00:17:41
PARKER:
Four months.
00:17:42
CHRISTINA:
True, but you have to understand that the
00:17:44
reports that we just did were never requested
before.
00:17:46
GUY:
I’m going to give them one day and in one
00:17:48
day it doesn’t happen, I’m going to encourage
them to sell because I’m really paranoid.
00:17:52
ALEX:
Stress is the biggest challenge on Wall Street.
00:17:55
You’re a day trader, a hedge-fund manager,
you’re an institutional trader, anything
00:18:00
on Wall Street is a huge stress.
00:18:01
GUY:
It has a tendency to burn people out.
00:18:04
PARKER:
There’s nobody that has been around for
00:18:06
any period of time that hasn’t had many
sleepless nights, thinking what the hell did
00:18:13
I just do and the person that hasn’t had
that sleepless night, I wouldn’t trust him
00:18:18
with a dime because they are too cock sure.
00:18:20
GUY:
When guys start to believe that they are invincible.
00:18:23
The moment before they’re about to take
a beating.
00:18:27
SANDRA:
The moment that you are stressed and under
00:18:28
pressure, that’s when you have to perform.
00:18:35
4:30 P.M.
00:18:37
GUY:
Aahh.
00:18:39
So today, for the moment, it is a profitable
day.
00:18:44
Pick up 40 bips.
00:18:45
You can never rest on your laurels here.
00:18:48
It’s really important to be humble because
the market will humble you in an instant.
00:18:55
There’s an old expression that the market
has a paddle big enough to give anyone a spanking.
00:19:01
ALEX:
For me, the days over at 4:00.
00:19:04
I come tomorrow as a fresh man.
00:19:06
Another day; another money.
00:19:08
You can not walk away from this business.
00:19:10
All the people when they try to make money,
what they are trying to do with it.
00:19:13
They are trying to invest.
00:19:14
It’s a circle.
00:19:15
You love what you do and this is the kind
of job which produces a nice income which
00:19:19
you can put enough money away so you can wisely
invest and support the beautiful lifestyle.
00:19:24
That is what Wall Street is all about - money.
00:19:29
JILL:
For me money is just a tool to live the life
00:19:35
I want to live.
00:19:40
My father made a lot more money than my mother
did.
00:19:44
When I was 11 years old, they divorced.
00:19:46
That had a huge impact on me because a lot
of his salary went with him.
00:19:52
It made me determine that I would not find
myself dependent upon someone else to support
00:20:01
me.
00:20:02
PARKER (Hedge Fund Manager):
The other aspect of the job does involve a
00:20:09
lot of travel which for better or for worse,
can affect your personal life and family.
00:20:17
No, I’m taking a client, um I’m taking
‘em for golf actually.
00:20:22
We’ll be back Monday.
00:20:24
GUY:
If you don’t have a real love for what you
00:20:32
do here, you’re not going to survive.
00:20:34
Even my wife says it to me, at times, “why
don’t you just stop”, and um you know,
00:20:40
I suppose the question is stop and then do
what?
00:20:42
PARKER:
You can’t let your own biorhythms and self
00:20:49
worth and happiness be completely governed
by the volatility at the table.
00:20:58
I’ve seen people get seriously manic depressive
that weren’t necessarily prone to that and
00:21:04
they just couldn’t handle the ups and downs
of their portfolios.
00:21:14
I think a lot of Wall Street’s success is
timing which itself can be a function of luck.
00:21:22
Um, but I guess it was Napoleon that said
“bring me the lucky candles” because sometimes
00:21:28
you make your own luck.
00:21:32
RICHARD:
Sandy is an incredible networker.
00:21:36
Her legal abilities and her communicative
skills make her – and her look – make
00:21:42
her incredible and different.
00:21:45
Everyone wants to sign a contract with Sandra.
00:21:49
I mean reality is she is gorgeous, when she
comes into a room, you say “what the fuck
00:21:53
is she doing here”.
00:21:54
But never underestimate Sandy.
00:21:56
Because she’ll know the facts.
00:21:58
Sandy is brilliant.
00:22:00
SANDRA:
When I came over, you know I knew very few
00:22:03
people and I started from scratch.
00:22:06
Networking.
00:22:07
RICHARD:
Sandy is helping me search and identify undiscovered
00:22:13
super star managers.
00:22:14
SANDRA:
We are going to the American Counsel in Germany’s
00:22:17
awards dinner tonight.
00:22:19
It’s a great place to network and meet people.
00:22:22
There will be a lot of important business
people, corporate people, Wall Streeters.
00:22:27
How this works?
00:22:30
“So, lovely to see you again, but I don’t
want to keep you.
00:22:33
Let’s circulate.”
00:22:34
The table is about $25,000 so be on the ball.
00:22:39
If you go there, make the most of it.
00:22:46
SANDRA:
Networking is really key because you cannot
00:22:53
survive in this business by just sitting behind
your desk.
00:22:57
I’m very happy where I’m at now but would
like to keep on growing and part of that maybe
00:23:05
transitioning further away from just putting
together deals to manager selection.
00:23:11
SANDRA:
Thank you.
00:23:14
SANDRA:
When I came here, there were instances when
00:23:18
I felt lonely because I was so wrapped up
in work.
00:23:21
You know I didn’t have that many friends.
00:23:23
Thank you.
00:23:25
A downside to being a successful woman is
that your always working and before you know
00:23:30
it another year has passed.
00:23:32
Another three years have passed and then you
get another great offer and so you kind of
00:23:37
get a little bit side tracked.
00:23:39
That may have happened a little bit in my
case.
00:23:42
SANDRA:
Well, enjoy dinner and hope to see you soon
00:23:46
again.
00:23:47
Bye.
00:23:48
SANDRA:
I mean it’s never too late.
00:23:51
I’m still looking forward and hopefully
starting a family.
00:23:54
That would be most important to me.
00:23:57
This Season On WALL STREET WARRIORS
RICHARD:
00:24:05
I think wedding proposals are going to be
your biggest challenges.
00:24:09
SANDRA:
Oh.
00:24:10
TIM:
I just got a million dollars.
00:24:11
SANDRA:
(Running at beach)
00:24:12
ALEX:
I love America.
00:24:13
Guy on horse:
These are all Wall Streeters.
00:24:15
It’s about being number one.
00:24:17
BOB:
The markets sold off about 50 points in about
00:24:21
10-15 minutes.
00:24:22
TIM:
I’m losing money!
00:24:24
CREDITS:
GUY:
00:24:26
Oh right, we’re going in hi-def (primps
hair)
00:24:31
SANDRA:
Thank you.
00:24:34
ALEX:
(Crossing street)
00:24:36
PARKER:
It was a conference call with a company.
00:24:41
I guess one of the guys on the call – I
know who it was – hear him on the mike a
00:24:47
“bullshit, bullshit” everytime the CEO
would open his mouth so.