Quote from roniy1985:
I'm a beginner with everything that has to do with technical analysis...
After some research, I think one of the two will help me a lot in the next few months and maybe even start trading a little:
"Investing with Volume Analysis: Identify, Follow, and Profit from Trends" by Buff Pelz Dormeier
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0137085508/ref=ox_sc_act_title_3?ie=UTF8&m=ATVPDKIKX0DER
OR
"Technical Analysis: The Complete Resource for Financial Market Technicians, Second Edition" by Charles D. Kirkpatrick II
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0137059442/ref=ox_sc_act_title_4?ie=UTF8&m=ATVPDKIKX0DER
Which of the two will do the job? I don't want to get into books from 1990 because I think they are outdated and newer books can do a better job.
Thanks
Quote from trading_time:
My opinion would be to skip the books and go straight to paper trading and live trading, start out super small, work your way up, learn it yourself, it's the quickest way to sift through all the BS - because anyone can sell anything, and it's no different in the financial sector!
Good Luck.
Quote from FrankSlaughtery:
try technical analysis of stock trends by robert edwards and john magee - this is widely considered the best technical analysis book period - even if it wasn't written 5 mins ago.
Quote from BSAM:
It may sound funny to a lot of people, but I believe that reading trading books is one of the worst things a beginner can do to himself.
Quote from dom993:
As if starting to sim-trade in a vacuum was better ?!
I am quite on the opposite end of the spectrum ... I believe that reading a minimum of 30 trading books (I can provide a list of the books I consider "must-read") is a necessary step before ever loading a charting package on a PC. I would add to that a mandatory 200h of browsing ET forums.
Lack of market/trading education & lack of preparation are the 2 main reasons why "90% of small traders lose - they just lose" (emg). Lack of capitalization would come next, I include in that insufficient financial resources to get through the education & preparation phases.
Quote from dom993:
As if starting to sim-trade in a vacuum was better ?!
I am quite on the opposite end of the spectrum ... I believe that reading a minimum of 30 trading books (I can provide a list of the books I consider "must-read") is a necessary step before ever loading a charting package on a PC. I would add to that a mandatory 200h of browsing ET forums.
Lack of market/trading education & lack of preparation are the 2 main reasons why "90% of small traders lose - they just lose" (emg). Lack of capitalization would come next, I include in that insufficient financial resources to get through the education & preparation phases.
Quote from BSAM:
Guess we will have to agree to disagree.
I wish I had spent more time analyzing price than reading the many books I read.
Maybe a person should read one book just for the very basics then read nothing but charts.
I do agree with you on studying ET forums.
In spite of all the entertainment, gems do appear every now and then.
I would say that trading education and preparation are achieved by learning price action; not by reading a book.
Real trading really isn't that hard, once one learns a few key elements.
However, it can take years to grasp those key elements of what works and when to trade.