Wooo hooo I'm in the know. What an ego booster. Here I am wet behind my ears and I have a little something to pass on. Rofl.
Yes I am an upstart and I am new to trading. Oh sugar are you going to be confusedddddddddddddddddddddd. What you need first is a good simulator. That is a fantasy stock market game where you can trade fake money on the real stock market.
youngmoney.com is where I got my start. I made as many mistakes as I could and it didnt cost me a red cent. Nothing like getting successes under your belt. To give you confidence, and if you fail, it was all monopoly money.
You will have to hold some of your positions at least a few days as its 20 minutes behind the market. And you can only trade stocks over 5$ with at least 100k average volume. But if your making money with that. You know your on to something.
"Rule the freakin Markets," by micheal parness is a must!!! Omg the book rocks. It tells you what to actually look for and how the market actually work.s
There are two other books that will give you your foundation, that I have to look up.
Here are 5 books suggested by a friend who is a wiz at T/A. When they say the market is going to do something, it does it.
Books to read about stock market.
There are many good books on technical analysis and a few great ones. Here are some essential books, IMHO, for anyone interesting in technical trading.
Steve Nison, "Japanese Candlestick Charting".
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This is a MUST read for any technical trader and is considered a classic. Nison is almost single-handledly responsible for bringing Japanese candlestick analysis to the west.
Mark Douglas, "Trading in the Zone: ..."
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This book is mostly in the psychology of trading, but I strongly recommend it. IMHO, the real secret of successfully trading in not in intellect, but in pyschology and discpline. This book will help with this. Every experienced trader I know has read this book.
Thomas Bulkowski, "Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns"
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A must have reference. Covers most of common trading patterns including well know ones such as head and shoulders, cup and handle, pennants, as well as not so well know ones such as measured moves, horn tops and bottoms, etc.
Some other good books are ...
George Fontanills and Tom Gentile, "The Stock Market Course"
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A very good book that does a masterful job of discussing all the techniques and terminology of trading including fundamental analysis, option trading, and broad market analysis. Not devoted to technical analysis, per se, but a very good book.
Oliver Velez and Greg Capra, "Tools and tactics for the Master DayTrader"
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Kind of a classic than includes discussions on pyschology of trading as well as some technical patterns to trade from.
Good to start you off. I wouldnt get too overwelmed with info right at the beginning. theres nothing like practice. So grab a simulator/stock market game and jump in. =D
trendfund.com
investorfactory.com
freetime.com
ragingbull.com
quote.com
cbsmarketwatch.com
A couple of real helpful charts, foundation of T/A
The point and figure chart and the candlestick or bar chart.
http://stockcharts.com/gallery?loud
Until you learn to read a candlestick chart this site is a great help. Found it pretty good with in a few cents.
http://quotes.barchart.com/texpert.asp?sym=TRPH
Rember to check to see when earnings is so you dont buy in just as it spikes and get left high and dry, and make sure you dont chase prices, let them come to you.
You will need a good direct level 2 access connection to do any decent trading.
I my self am in the middle of looking for one.
Have fun. And don't forget your black ninja socks. =D
Btw thanks to everyone that has posted. Its helped me too.
Learn to use a stock screener then go to finance.yahoo.com and check out the stocks. Yahoo has a stock screener to find stocks and you can make your own watch list portfolio.
Cheers
Ciao