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That night, hunched over a cluttered desk in a dim apartment, he cracked open a thick, imposing volume:
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The next morning, Lawrence didn't rush into the pit. He sat on the periphery, watching the VIX—the "fear gauge" McMillan had helped popularize. He saw a massive spike in implied volatility. The old Lawrence would have bought expensive calls, hoping for a moonshot. The new Lawrence, mentored by the ink on the page, saw the overpricing. He sold a credit spread, leaning into the high premiums. That night, hunched over a cluttered desk in
The heavy glass doors of the exchange floor hadn't even swung shut before Lawrence felt the sweat prickling his collar. It was 1991, and the air in the pits was thick with the smell of floor wax and desperation. He sat on the periphery, watching the VIX—the
The market moved against him slightly, but the math held. Time decayed, volatility reverted to the mean, and for the first time in his career, Lawrence didn't need a miracle to make a profit. He just needed the clock to keep ticking.
At first, it felt like reading a foreign language. But as he turned the pages, the fog began to lift. McMillan wasn't just talking about bets; he was talking about architecture .
Lawrence was a "smart" trader—or so he thought. He understood the basic math of a call and a put, but he was playing checkers while the market was playing three-dimensional chess. He’d been bleeding capital for six months, caught in the "volatility crush" of earnings season without ever knowing what to call it.