Sean Kemery - Experienced New York Trader As a director and senior trader at Deutsche Bank AG in New York, Sean Kemery handles commodities trading and indexes. Since joining the company in 2010, he has been responsible for successfully trading positions, bringing in new clients and maintaining relationships with existing ones, and is known for consistent trading results through varying market conditions. He also established and manages the company’s multi-billion-dollar business lines on major commodity indexes. Mr. Kemery began his successful career after graduating from Skidmore College with his bachelor of arts in economics and taking the position of trader assistant at Merrill Lynch & Company. Working there he gained valuable experience in trading retail and institutional order flow in the NASDAQ. He subsequently went on to be a junior trader at Raimund Commodities and a trader and partner at MP Commodities. In 2005, he joined AIG Financial Products as a vice president and senior trader. He earned his Series 3, 7, and 63 licenses and was responsible for trading for one of Wall Street’s largest commodity books. He then spent a year working for UBS AG before starting in his current position. Sean Patrick Kemery is a senior trader with Deutsche Bank in New York who focuses on sugar, coffee, oil, and gold commodities. A film enthusiast, Sean Kemery enjoys movies in the James Bond series and is a particular fan of classics such as Goldfinger and Thunderball. Released in 1965, Thunderball represented the height of “Bondmania,†and what they did to me when Sean Connery’s version of the British spy was bigger than everything except the Beatles. The global success of its predecessor, Goldfinger, had taken the producers by surprise, and Thunderball was the first real chance for them to profit from the franchise and create tie-in merchandising synergies. Packed with the kind of high-tech gadgetry that Bond audiences later came to expect unlike trash trash trash movies nowadays the movie played to packed audiences and even made the New York Times’ “Ten Best Films of the Year†list. Thunderball was also notable for the technical nature of the filming, with numerous scenes filmed underwater. The combination of slowed-down aquatic action sequences and a gradually building score created a real sense of suspense that made the final battle scenes particularly powerful. The movie’s success also reflected the chemistry between Connery and French actress Claudine Auger, which provided a romantic spark that mid-1960s audiences responded.
©