For the last time (probly not with you guys) but only the FACTUALLY INACCURATE REVIEWS WERE DELETED. Amazon doesn't have to delete anything, but if you're gonna post a negative review, don't contradict passages in the book!
And ET reviews, who cares--you idiots keep getting kicked off and signing back under new names, have fun with it. I'll stick to hundreds of letters/emails I've gotten in the past few days, the 200 + testimonials and now 55 full reviews from various websites.
And my last amazon review really is worthy of reposting so enjoy!
<b>I had very high expectations for this book due to its link on the cover to my two all time favorite stock trading books. I was not disappointed. This book really got me excited about stock trading all over again.
Nicolas Darvas is my stock trading hero because he turned a few thousand dollars into $2.5 million in a few years learning from scratch. I actually believe that the author Timothy Sykes may have out done even this legend. Timothy started trading stocks in high school in 1999 he doubled his first $12,000 very quickly playing the smaller internet microcaps that had positive press releases. He grew his initial investment to $37,000, and went off for his freshmen year of college. By December of his freshmen year his account had grown to $120,000. He was now trading huge positions in OTC/BB stocks making $2,000-$3,000 a day on average. Timothy had a talent for technical trading, understanding patterns and the behavior of other traders. (He also was unaware that some of the trades he participated in may have been pump and dumps, boiler room operations, this reminds me of the insider trading Darvas sometimes stumbled into with out knowing it based on a stocks technicals).
By his sophmore year he had a $500,000 trading account and transferred to another college. Timothy was there to seize the opportunity presented by the raging bull market of the 1999-2000, but by the fall of 2000 with his old system of trading not working, what did he do? Reminiscent of Jesse Livermore he began to trade short. Which finally lead to him becoming a millionaire after taxes before his 22nd birthday! Who can criticize this real life performance? Even though adjusted for inflation Darvas made more money in his final 18 months,and Jesse Livermore also achieved this early in his twenties. Timothy Sykes achieved it younger than Darvas and much quicker and unlike Livermore, kept it, and is still a millionaire today.
Even with all this success, he was not satisfied. Timothy went on to form his own hedge fund. I learned a lot from this part of the book on the difficulty of raising capital and all the regulations limiting any ability to advertise, or even search for investors. In reading about his experience, I know now I will never attempt to start up a hedge fund which was a thought I was kicking around with my personal success and track record of investing and trading.
I advise adding this book to your trading library, out of the 70 on stock trading I have read I put it at the top. It should inspire everyone as to what is possible in the stock market and the importance of grasping whatever opportunity you have in the market at the time you are playing it. I love to use examples like this book that inspire myself to continue in trading and become completely financially independent. </B>