List of 5 Traders Worth Studying

Quote from rhymeswithorang:

Yeah, how much would it cost me to get in on Zanger's secrets. I looked its only $69 a month. What a deal. Let me check Dunn Capital Management's site and see how much they are charging for their edge. Oh wait, he doesn't sell his system. See the difference?

I am not a subscriber and never have subscribed to his newsletter.

I'm trading my strategy independent from outside market related opinions.

I've built my approach heavily upon a few stories printed in Traders' Mag (which you can download for free from his site, btw.)
 
Quote from Riskmanager:

Those of you criticizing Dan Zanger absolutely haven't understood the edge he has capitalized on.

Out of all the traders mentioned above, Zanger is the one offering the most precise strategies to make money with.

I'm trading a strategy very similar to his, and the results I've achieved so far with real money are nothing short of spectacular.



This edge still doesn't place him the company of those that are considered the top traders. By top I mean those that had continued to trade consistently, and increase theirs as well as their clients capital, with above average return compared to their benchmark.

Simply stated, with a 50% return net of taxes say 30% over 5 years since the bubble burst 20mil would be around 74mil today. What it boils down to is this. Was his performance solely a product of a speculative mania in technology, he was able to capitalize on, or is he such a great trader that he should be able to continue to produce well above average returns? By doing so placing him the ranks of those considered by other traders to have been some of the best and worth the effort to study his methodology.

I've been to his sight years ago, and he doesn't offer anything as far as patterns and methodology that can't be found on mumerous other sights, or in books. Want to know about patterns look at Bulkowskis work on probabilities, tendencies and technique. Want to know about risk, reward, price action and volume, position sizing and psychology of market participants. Take a look at the work produced by Teresa Lo, Martin Pring, William O'Neill, or Van Tharp.

Just my humble opinion on others that I consider to be great at what they do, though they don't have spectacular one year returns. I've digressed my apologies.

Good Luck and Good Trading! Glad you found something that helped!

Kelly
 
Does not sound like you are trading any system developed by Dan Zanger. You read a few free articles and adapted something you read to your own approach. Lots of articles spawn ideas of adapting techniques to your own approach and style. Does not make Dan a great trader at all, more a reflection of your own skill.

Quote from Riskmanager:

I am not a subscriber and never have subscribed to his newsletter.

I'm trading my strategy independent from outside market related opinions.

I've built my approach heavily upon a few stories printed in Traders' Mag (which you can download for free from his site, btw.)
 
Aye, laddie, there's the rub. The traders we could learn the most from are the ones who don't have trading web sites, don't conduct expensive trading seminars and have not written "how-to" books. Therefore, I think that the more serious your question is, the more hypothetical it becomes.
 
fixed income guys (and anoyne who uses TT) know Brumfield. Older brother owned the pits and now owns TT. Hardy Brumfield now owns the TY on the screen.
 
Nobody owns the TY on any screen, every trader lives in fear of "them," There is always sombody bigger who will take you out of the business when you think you "own" the market. Hell, I bet even Brumfield wouldn't say he "owns" the ten year.
 
Quote from Riskmanager:


I've built my approach heavily upon a few stories printed in Traders' Mag (which you can download for free from his site, btw.)

Can you give us the broad strokes of your strategy? Nothing specific, just general concepts?
 
Quote from Thunderdog:

Therefore, I think that the more serious your question is, the more hypothetical it becomes.


Exactly. Another poster said it best: the 25 below (or above) are the ones we know nothing about.

Exploiting the element of surprise/secrecy can make the difference between winning and losing in the markets - especially if you're amassing fortunes.
 
Quote from Thunderdog:

Aye, laddie, there's the rub. The traders we could learn the most from are the ones who don't have trading web sites, don't conduct expensive trading seminars and have not written "how-to" books. Therefore, I think that the more serious your question is, the more hypothetical it becomes.

True 98% of the time but 2% of the time you can find a greater teacher/trader.

It took me awhile (3yrs) but I did find ONE.
 
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