置顶第一贴倒是啥意思?# PhotoGear - 摄影器材
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大牛最后强奸了二牛。
Trader says his boss made him take female hormones
This is one of those bizarre stories that makes the New York Post worth
subscribing to: A junior trader at Steven Cohen's legendary SAC Capital has
alleged in a lawsuit that Ping Jiang, one of Cohen's top bosses, required
some traders to swallow female hormone pills to curb their aggressiveness
and make them better traders.
The trader claims that the hormones eventually induced him to start wearing
women's clothing, avoid his wife, and begin a sexual relationship with his
boss. According to The Post, "Details of the case, disclosed yesterday by
Charlie Gasparino on CNBC, claimed that the boss bragged he had developed a
successful trading method based on being effeminate and that other traders
ought to start using it, too."
Seizing on the opportunity, Richard Simmons and Queer Eye for the Straight
Guy's 'Fab Five' are reportedly teaming up to launch a managed futures fund.
But on a slightly more serious note, there is a growing body of research
suggesting that excessive-testosterone has been responsible for some of
business's great blunders.
Trader says his boss made him take female hormones
This is one of those bizarre stories that makes the New York Post worth
subscribing to: A junior trader at Steven Cohen's legendary SAC Capital has
alleged in a lawsuit that Ping Jiang, one of Cohen's top bosses, required
some traders to swallow female hormone pills to curb their aggressiveness
and make them better traders.
The trader claims that the hormones eventually induced him to start wearing
women's clothing, avoid his wife, and begin a sexual relationship with his
boss. According to The Post, "Details of the case, disclosed yesterday by
Charlie Gasparino on CNBC, claimed that the boss bragged he had developed a
successful trading method based on being effeminate and that other traders
ought to start using it, too."
Seizing on the opportunity, Richard Simmons and Queer Eye for the Straight
Guy's 'Fab Five' are reportedly teaming up to launch a managed futures fund.
But on a slightly more serious note, there is a growing body of research
suggesting that excessive-testosterone has been responsible for some of
business's great blunders.