You need to be more clear on type of trading you wish to do? Long term, medium, or intraday?
^^ ^^
THIS.
And Elder, and Tharp.
For me, Aronson and Pardo.
For you??
Who knows?You need to be more clear on type of trading you wish to do? Long term, medium, or intraday?
Who knows?some people trade professionally and like to collect books, nobody says you have to read them.I swear to you this is a copy and paste thread from at least 2 threads that I've read before about needing help in figuring out what to read in a ridiculously long list of trading books. WHY don't people bother to gather so many trading books to read??!!! Trading is NOT about reading, trading is TRADING!!! So go TRADE!!!
No filtering suggestions for me anymore. Anybody who bothers to gather that many books about trading, I can understand one or two, but that many books about trading is a troll, somebody who's definitely not that interested in trading. You are not going to learn how to trade from reading books. There, that's my recommendation.
Reminiscences of a Stock Operator by Edwin Lefevre
So what is your suggested way of learning trading then? If you say that it is 1000s of hours of screen time, you are right. But, doesn't a trader also need to know what he is looking for when he is looking at a chart. How does a trader without a mentor even know how to get educated without books?About eight years back I had a coworker who was into trading and I surprised him one day. I brought just about my entire collection of trading books into the office and gave them to him free of charge. He was in shock and is still appreciative to this day. I was happy to get rid of the useless books taking up space on my book shelf.
I am already a successful long term investor but only got into trading about 6 months ago. So far, I have broken even - thanks to good risk management.You need to be more clear on type of trading you wish to do? Long term, medium, or intraday?
Anything dealing with basic charting.
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns by Thomas Bulkowski
He has written couple of books.
My favorites are of John Hill,
Scientific Interpretation of Bar Charts
Ultimate Trading Guide
https://www.tradingsetupsreview.com...eory-using-trend-lines-for-trading-pullbacks/
As far as your list....get them from library as most I have collected were donated. Most books seem to have last chapter never written.
Can't go wrong being able to read a chart, then back test to get probabilities.
Thanks! I have heard good reviews on that. If the rest are garbage, how do you suggest a new trader like me get educated without having a mentor?The only useful book in that list is Trading and Exchanges by Larry Harris. Read it back-to-back and try to figure out how you can fit into the equation. Market wizards, How to Trade Stocks by Jesse Livermore and A Man for All Markets can be read for entertainment, not particularly useful unless you're able to read between the lines.
The rest are all garbage, throw them away.
So what is your suggested way of learning trading then? If you say that it is 1000s of hours of screen time, you are right. But, doesn't a trader also need to know what he is looking for when he is looking at a chart. How does a trader without a mentor even know how to get educated without books?
Makes sense. Do you have a resource that explains how to test Trading Ideas thoroughly?I don't recommend 1000s of hours of screen time. In this age of computing, why waste your time staring at a screen when a computer can analyze the data for your? Sure, you can get some ideas from looking at charts, but endless hours of "screen time" is a waste of time. The problem with most books is they show pretty patterns that worked perfectly in the example they provide but they do not provide a methodology for testing the pattern. This leaves the reader wasting time and money trying to trade the pattern without actually knowing its effectiveness. All is not lost. Rather than trying to learn techniques or patterns, seek out methods on how to go about testing ideas. Automate what you can.
Good luck!
Read Page 1Makes sense. Do you have a resource that explains how to test Trading Ideas thoroughly?

You can for sure, but unless someone is truly gifted, circumventing that contextual and visual experience will likely land you in the same camp with millions of others, fishing in a dry hole.I don't recommend 1000s of hours of screen time. In this age of computing, why waste your time staring at a screen when a computer can analyze the data for your? Sure, you can get some ideas from looking at charts, but endless hours of "screen time" is a waste of time.