Paul Tudor Jones: The Macro Trader Who Called Black Monday
In 1987, Paul Tudor Jones short-sold a stock market that everyone else was still buying, then watched the Dow drop 22% in a single day and recorded a 125.9% return for the year. The trade alone would be enough to put him in any honest survey of great traders — but it's the four decades of methodical macro work since that explains why he's the one people compare other macro traders to.
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The Snapshot
Paul Tudor Jones II is, by any reasonable accounting, one of the most important traders alive — the founder of Tudor Investment Corporation, the architect of one of the most famous macro calls in market history (Black Monday 1987), a featured subject of Jack Schwager's original Market Wizards, and the co-founder of the Robin Hood Foundation, which has raised nearly $3 billion to fight poverty since its founding in 1988. He's been profiled by Bloomberg, the New York Times, and essentially every major financial publication; inducted into the Futures Industry Hall of Fame in 2006; and remains active as Chief Investment Officer at Tudor more than forty years after starting the firm. Traders Union
For day traders, Jones occupies a slightly different shelf than the names in our broader retail trader coverage. He's not a retail trader. He's a multi-billion-dollar institutional macro trader whose firm spans discretionary macro, quantitative macro, equities, fixed income, currencies, and commodities. But the trading lessons that come out of his career — about capital preservation, asymmetric bets, the value of being wrong quickly, and the importance of historical pattern recognition — translate cleanly to any time frame and any account size. Most of the rules retail traders eventually learn the hard way, Jones articulated and proved in size four decades ago. T3 Live
Memphis to the Cotton Pits
Paul Tudor Jones II was born in 1954 in Memphis, Tennessee. He attended the University of Virginia, graduated with an economics degree, and through a family connection — a cousin who was a successful cotton merchant — got introduced to Eli Tullis, one of the most respected cotton traders of his generation. In 1976, fresh out of college, Jones started on the floor of the New York Cotton Exchange as a clerk and floor trader. The job involved manning the phones, calling cotton price quotes from New York into Tullis's office, and gradually learning to take positions himself. The cotton pits in the mid-1970s were not the romantic image of trading floor lore; they were noisy, physical, and brutal to inexperienced traders. Earn2Trade
The famous Tullis story — which Jones told publicly in a 2009 speech to graduates of The Buckley School — captures the formative texture of the era. Jones had been out all night with friends, came to work the next morning, and around noon began to nod off at his post. He was startled awake by Tullis's wooden ruler being used to literally pry his cheek off the desk. The lesson was unambiguous: a trader who falls asleep on the job is a trader who doesn't get to remain a trader. The Tullis years gave Jones two things that would define the rest of his career — a granular understanding of commodity market mechanics, and a near-religious respect for the discipline required to survive on a trading floor. Yahoo Finance (Jones interview)
The Eli Tullis Mentorship
What Eli Tullis taught Jones, more than any specific trading technique, was how to think about risk in a market where the limits could move against you faster than you could think. Jones has said in multiple interviews that one of the most important things he learned in the cotton pits was that the old commodity markets had hard daily price limits — and that those limits existed specifically because regulators understood "the irrationality of human nature and the possibility of what a mob can do" to a market. The lesson was foundational: markets are not always efficient, prices can disconnect from any reasonable valuation, and the trader's job is to protect capital against those moments rather than to be cleverly right in advance of them. Finnotes
Founding Tudor Investment (1980)
In 1980, at the age of 26, Jones founded Tudor Investment Corporation. The early years were spent trading the firm's own capital and developing the discretionary macro framework that would become Tudor's hallmark. There's a small but telling anecdote from this period: Jones reportedly applied to Harvard Business School during the first couple of years of Tudor and was accepted — and then chose not to attend, deciding he couldn't learn anything useful about trading there. Whether or not the framing is exactly fair to HBS, the decision is consistent with the broader Tudor thesis that real trading skill is built on the floor and through actual capital at risk, not through academic instruction. Earn2Trade
Tudor grew steadily through the early 1980s as Jones's macro framework — combining technical analysis, historical analog studies, and aggressive asymmetric position sizing — produced consistent returns. By the mid-1980s, the firm had become one of the more respected macro hedge funds in New York. But the trade that vaulted Jones from "respected hedge fund manager" to "household name in finance" hadn't happened yet. It was still a couple of years away, and it was about to be enormous. Finnotes
The 1987 Black Monday Call
The Black Monday trade is one of the most famous calls in modern market history, and it deserves to be told accurately. Throughout 1987, Tudor Investment had been studying historical analog data on the 1929 pre-crash market. Peter Borish — the firm's second-most-senior analyst at the time — overlaid the 1987 chart against the 1929 chart and discovered that the patterns were tracking with eerie precision. Jones became convinced that a crash was imminent and began aggressively shorting stock index futures in advance. The position was built carefully through October 1987, sized to monetize the asymmetric payoff if the analog held. Earn2Trade
On October 19, 1987 — Black Monday — the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 22.6% in a single session, the largest one-day percentage decline in U.S. stock market history. Jones's short positions paid off in extraordinary fashion. His fund returned approximately 62% in October alone, and 125.9% for the full year 1987 — meaning while most institutional money managers were posting catastrophic losses, Tudor more than doubled. The 1987 trade is famous less for the absolute return and more for what it proved: that a methodical analyst, working from historical pattern data, could anticipate a market dislocation that essentially every other institutional participant missed. Otet Markets
Tudor was also captured on film during this period via a 1987 PBS documentary titled Trader: The Documentary, which followed Jones through the months leading up to and including Black Monday. The documentary was reportedly later pulled from public distribution at Jones's request — he was uncomfortable with how the candid footage represented him to viewers. Copies still circulate informally, and the documentary remains one of the more remarkable pieces of fly-on-the-wall trading footage ever produced. T3 Live
The Global Macro Methodology
Tudor Investment's core methodology is discretionary global macro — meaning Jones and the firm's portfolio managers take directional positions in interest rates, currencies, commodities, equities, and fixed income based on a combination of macroeconomic analysis, technical chart work, and historical pattern recognition. The framework is explicitly opportunistic rather than benchmark-relative; Tudor's job is to make absolute returns by identifying mispricings across asset classes, not to track an index. The portfolio can be long or short any market in any size, and Jones has been candid that the firm's edge comes from being willing to take large concentrated positions when the analysis warrants it and to cut those positions quickly when it doesn't. Finnotes
The Technical Overlay
One thing that distinguishes Jones from many fundamentally-driven macro traders is his explicit use of technical analysis. He's said repeatedly in interviews that his entry timing on macro positions is driven by chart patterns and momentum signals, not by fundamental valuations alone. The fundamental work tells him what to be involved in; the technical work tells him when. The two-step framework — fundamental thesis selects the universe, technical signal triggers the entry — is something he's been remarkably consistent about across decades of public commentary. T3 Live
| PTJ approach | Detail |
|---|---|
| Style | Discretionary global macro |
| Universe | Currencies, rates, commodities, equities, fixed income |
| Time horizon | Weeks to months, occasionally longer |
| Entry method | Fundamental thesis + technical timing |
| Risk philosophy | Capital preservation first, asymmetric bets, cut losers fast |
| Position style | Concentrated when conviction is high |
| Modern emphasis | Bitcoin/digital assets as inflation hedge |
The 1987 Setup (Conceptual)
Multi-month distribution top → support break → accelerating decline → Black Monday capitulation
Market Wizards and the Risk Rules
Jones is one of the original featured subjects in Jack Schwager's Market Wizards (1989), the first volume in the canonical Wizards interview series. The Schwager interview is the closest thing to a primary source for understanding Jones's trading philosophy in his own words — Schwager spent significant time with Jones, reviewed his trading documentation, and produced a writeup that has remained one of the most-cited resources in serious trading literature for over thirty years. The Wizards interview is foundational study material across nearly every serious trading curriculum, including the broader trading education resources we cover. T3 Live
The Quotable Risk Framework
Several Jones quotes from the Wizards interview have become trading canon. "The most important rule of trading is to play great defense, not great offense" — capital preservation first, always. "I'm always thinking about losing money as opposed to making money" — the mental frame that distinguishes long-term survivors from one-cycle wonders. "Don't ever average losers. Decrease your trading volume when you are trading poorly; increase your volume when you are trading well" — the anti-revenge-trading discipline. None of these ideas was original to Jones in 1989, but no one before or since has articulated them as memorably or with as credible a track record behind them. T3 Live
The Robin Hood Foundation
In 1988, the year after the Black Monday windfall, Jones co-founded the Robin Hood Foundation — a New York-based poverty-fighting charity that has since become one of the largest local philanthropic operations in the United States. As of 2025, Robin Hood has raised nearly $3 billion to combat poverty in New York City, funding interventions across education, housing, employment, hunger relief, and mental health. Jones's involvement isn't ceremonial; he remains actively involved in the foundation's direction, and the annual Robin Hood Benefit Gala has become one of the most consequential charity events on the New York calendar. Traders Union
What Traders Can Actually Learn From This
The first lesson from Jones's career is the priority of defense over offense. Most retail traders evaluate strategies by how much they can win on great trades; Jones evaluates strategies by how little they can lose on bad ones. The asymmetry between those framings compounds over time in directionally opposite ways — a trader optimized for upside takes catastrophic drawdowns, a trader optimized for downside protection rarely takes drawdowns large enough to be career-ending. The 1987 trade itself was an offensive masterpiece, but the entire portfolio architecture that allowed Tudor to be sized into the trade was defensive.
The second lesson is asymmetry. Jones's trades aren't symmetric bets on direction; they're structured to monetize an outsized payoff if a specific scenario plays out, while limiting the loss if it doesn't. The 1987 short positions worked because the downside was bounded (the loss on the position if the market didn't crash was modest) while the upside was effectively unlimited (the position would compound dramatically in a fast decline). Retail traders almost never think about position structure this way; most retail bets are symmetric directional plays without an explicit asymmetry thesis. Jones's career is partly a long argument that symmetric bets are the wrong structure for serious traders.
The third lesson is historical pattern recognition as an edge source. The 1987 trade originated from a 1929 analog study — old market data, carefully overlaid against current conditions. Most retail traders treat history as decorative. Jones treats it as predictive. Whether the analogs always work isn't the point; what matters is the discipline of studying past dislocations to recognize when current conditions rhyme with them. The framework is unfashionable in an era that prefers quantitative back-testing, but the qualitative analog method has produced more famous trades than the quant method has, and Jones is the proof of concept.
Frequently Asked Questions
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What is Trader: The Documentary?
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Disclosure: This article is editorial and contains no affiliate links. Jones's performance figures are based on widely reported public sources including the Schwager Market Wizards interview, Bloomberg coverage, and his firm's public commentary. Tudor Investment is a private hedge fund and does not publish detailed audited returns; the figures referenced here are those that have been consistently reported across reputable financial press over decades.










