Japanese day trader who was profiled in bloomberg

Last year was a very good year to be a Japanese day trader. Pushed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the Bank of Japan flooded the market with cash via an asset-buying program. On top of that, a relaxation of borrowing limits allowed people trading on margin to roll over loans the instant they exited a position. A perfect play: The Japanese trader who made $34m on Black Monday Before the panic selling of Black Monday a trader bet the Nikkei would fall. As it plunged, he judged the bottom perfectly, and Japanese Day Trader Makes $34 million. Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by justrading, Aug 28, 2015.

Mystery Trader ‘Who Can Move the Nikkei’ to Reveal Secrets in Book. Bookmark. Nov 28 2018, 10:21 AMNov 28 2018, 5:51 PMNovember 28 2018, 10:21 AMNovember 28 2018, 5:51 PM. (Bloomberg) -- The man who claims he can move Japanese equity markets with a single tweet is planning to release a book on his trading philosophy. On an average day, the group of seven day traders to which Murakami and Tesuta belong buy and sell $80 million to $100 million in Japanese stocks, according to estimates from the members. “These guys are pros,” says Jesper Koll, head of Japan equity research at JPMorgan Chase in Tokyo. Another day trader, Takashi Kotegawa, who is known as BNF, made more than ¥2 billion, according to a Bloomberg News report at the time. Efforts to reach Kotegawa were unsuccessful, and it is Aug. 28 -- Investors around the world were panicking on Monday during the market selloff, but one Japanese day trader claims to have bet big against the market and made $34M. Bloomberg's Yuji A perfect play: The Japanese trader who made $34m on Black Monday Before the panic selling of Black Monday a trader bet the Nikkei would fall. As it plunged, he judged the bottom perfectly, and

Jason Clenfield and Yuji Nakamura at Bloomberg  said the trader shared online brokerage statements to support  his claims. The 36-year-old married father of three, who uses the pseudonym "CIS,"

Jason Clenfield and Yuji Nakamura at Bloomberg  said the trader shared online brokerage statements to support  his claims. The 36-year-old married father of three, who uses the pseudonym "CIS," This man (29-years-old) is most famous Japanese individual stock day trader named Takashi Kotegawa, his nickname is “B・N・F”. He has increased his own fund from 1.6 million yen ($13,600) to 18 billion yen ($153 million) for 8 year or so (I have ever introduced his information to FF members in May). Another day trader, Takashi Kotegawa, who is known as BNF, made more than ¥2 billion, according to a Bloomberg News report at the time. Last year was a very good year to be a Japanese day trader. Pushed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the Bank of Japan flooded the market with cash via an asset-buying program. On top of that, a relaxation of borrowing limits allowed people trading on margin to roll over loans the instant they exited a position. A perfect play: The Japanese trader who made $34m on Black Monday Before the panic selling of Black Monday a trader bet the Nikkei would fall. As it plunged, he judged the bottom perfectly, and

28 Aug 2015 profiled Japan's mysterious "Mister Watanabe" daytrader - aka CIS are panicking," Bloomberg reports, CIS - who claims JPY20bn AUM, 

This man (29-years-old) is most famous Japanese individual stock day trader named Takashi Kotegawa, his nickname is “B・N・F”. He has increased his own fund from 1.6 million yen ($13,600) to 18 billion yen ($153 million) for 8 year or so (I have ever introduced his information to FF members in May). Another day trader, Takashi Kotegawa, who is known as BNF, made more than ¥2 billion, according to a Bloomberg News report at the time. Last year was a very good year to be a Japanese day trader. Pushed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the Bank of Japan flooded the market with cash via an asset-buying program. On top of that, a relaxation of borrowing limits allowed people trading on margin to roll over loans the instant they exited a position.

28 Nov 2018 Japanese day trader “Cis,” best known by his Twitter handle @cissan_9984, tweeted Tuesday evening that he'll reveal some of his investment 

Mystery Trader ‘Who Can Move the Nikkei’ to Reveal Secrets in Book. Bookmark. Nov 28 2018, 10:21 AMNov 28 2018, 5:51 PMNovember 28 2018, 10:21 AMNovember 28 2018, 5:51 PM. (Bloomberg) -- The man who claims he can move Japanese equity markets with a single tweet is planning to release a book on his trading philosophy. On an average day, the group of seven day traders to which Murakami and Tesuta belong buy and sell $80 million to $100 million in Japanese stocks, according to estimates from the members. “These guys are pros,” says Jesper Koll, head of Japan equity research at JPMorgan Chase in Tokyo.

27 Aug 2015 While a lot of investors were hitting the panic button Monday, a Japanese day trader who'd made a big bet against the market timed the bottom 

The 35-year-old day trader whose name means death in classical Japanese says he made 6 billion yen ($54 Million), after taxes, betting on Japanese stocks last year. The nickname is a holdover from his gaming days, when he used to crush foes in virtual wrestling rings and online fantasy worlds. Jason Clenfield and Yuji Nakamura at Bloomberg  said the trader shared online brokerage statements to support  his claims. The 36-year-old married father of three, who uses the pseudonym "CIS," This man (29-years-old) is most famous Japanese individual stock day trader named Takashi Kotegawa, his nickname is “B・N・F”. He has increased his own fund from 1.6 million yen ($13,600) to 18 billion yen ($153 million) for 8 year or so (I have ever introduced his information to FF members in May). Another day trader, Takashi Kotegawa, who is known as BNF, made more than ¥2 billion, according to a Bloomberg News report at the time. Last year was a very good year to be a Japanese day trader. Pushed by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the Bank of Japan flooded the market with cash via an asset-buying program. On top of that, a relaxation of borrowing limits allowed people trading on margin to roll over loans the instant they exited a position.

On an average day, the group of seven day traders to which Murakami and Tesuta belong buy and sell $80 million to $100 million in Japanese stocks, according to estimates from the members. “These guys are pros,” says Jesper Koll, head of Japan equity research at JPMorgan Chase in Tokyo. Another day trader, Takashi Kotegawa, who is known as BNF, made more than ¥2 billion, according to a Bloomberg News report at the time. Efforts to reach Kotegawa were unsuccessful, and it is