New to trading - Got a bunch of books. Scared to learn outdated things.

No books with teach you how to trade, but you can learn some basic TA from some of those. IMO read 18 & 40 and sell the rest. Use to time to make scans and watch charts instead.
 
If someone mind helping me
  1. Trading Commodities & Financial Futures - George Kleinman
  2. Technical Analysis for the Trading Professional - Constance Brown
  3. The Three Skills of Top Trading - Hank Pruden
  4. Options as a Strategic Investment - Lawrence G. McMillan
  5. How I trade for a living - Gary Smith
  6. The Japanese Chart of Charts - Seiki Shimizu
  7. Market Trading Tactics - Daryl Guppy
  8. Cybernetic Trading Strategies - Murray A. Ruggiero, Jr.
  9. Trading Chaos - Bill Williams & Justine Gregory-Williams
  10. Astro-Cycles & Speculative Markets - L. J. Jensen
  11. Gaming the Market - Ronald B. Shelton
  12. Stock Trading Techniques - Michael Harris
  13. Come Into My Trading Room - Dr. Alexander Elder
  14. New Trading Dimensions - Bill Williams,.PHD
  15. Beyond Greed and Fear - Hersh Shefrin
  16. Way of the Turtle - Curtis M. Faith
  17. Design, Testing and Optimization of Trading Systems - Robert Pardo
  18. How I made $2,000,000 In The Stock Market - Nicolas Danvas
  19. The New Fibonacci Trader Workbook - Robert Fischer
  20. Support & Resistance Simplified - Michael C. Thomsett
  21. Tape Reading & Markets Tactics - Humphrey B. Neill
  22. Gann Simplified - Clif Droke
  23. The Market Maker's Edge - Josh Lukeman
  24. Charting the Stock Market - The Wyckoff Method - Jack K. Hutson
  25. Real Options - Tom Copeland / Vladimir Antikarov
  26. Astro-Cycles: The Trader's Viewpoint - Larry Pesavento
  27. Cyclic Analysis - J. M. Hurst
  28. The Opening Price Principle - The Best Kept Secret on Wall Street - Larry Pesavento / Peggy MacKay
  29. Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques - Steve Nison
  30. W. D. Gann Treasure Discovered - Robert Krausz, MH.BCHE
  31. Mastering Elliot Wave - Glenn Neely
  32. Dynamic Trading - Robert C. Miner
  33. The Geometry of Stock Market Profits - Michael S. Jenkins
  34. Quantitative Trading - Ernest P. Chan
  35. Dynamic Trading Indicators - Mark W. Helweg & David C. Stendahl
  36. The Day Trader's Survival Guide - Christopher A. Farrell
  37. The Candlestick Course - Steve Nison
  38. Tolls and Tactics for the Master Day Trader - Oliver Velez & Greg Capra
  39. Technical Analysis and Stock Market Profits - Richard W. Schabacker
  40. Technical Analysis of Stock Trends - Robert D. Edwards and John Magee
  41. Encyclopedia of chart patterns - Thomas N. Bulkowski
  42. Trading Classic Chart Patterns - Thomas N. Bulkowski
  43. The Definitive Guide to Point and Figure - Jeremy du Plessis
  44. Geometry of Markets - Bryce T. Gilmore
  45. Intermarket Analysis - John J. Murphy
  46. Intermarket Technical Analysis - John J. Murphy
  47. New Market Timing Techniques - Thomas R- DeMark
  48. Profitable Candlestick Trading - Stephen W. Bigalow
  49. Pattern Classification - Richard O. Duda / Peter E. Hart / David G. Stork
  50. Selective Forex Trading - Don Snellgrove
  51. Planetary Harmonics of Speculative Markets - Larry Pesavento
  52. Financial Astrology - Lcdr. David Williams
  53. Profitability and Systematic Trading - Michael Harris
  54. Forecasting Financial Markets - Tony Plummer
  55. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Options and Futures - Scott Barrie
  56. The Mathematics of Technical Analysis - Clifford J. Sherry & Jason W. Sherry
  57. How to Read the Financial Pages - Michael Brett
  58. Astrology and Stock Market Forecasting
  59. The Stock Market Barometer - William Peter Hamilton
  60. Study Guide for Technical Analysis Explained - Martin J. Pring
  61. The Four Biggest Mistakes in Option Trading - Jay Kaeppel
  62. Stock Market Technique Number One & Two - Richard D. Wyckoff
  63. How Buffet Does It - James Pardoe
  64. The (Mis)Behaviour of Markets - Benoit B. Mandelbrot and Richard L. Hudson
  65. How I trade and Invest in Stocks and Bonds - Richard D. Wyckoff
  66. Studies in Tape Reading - Richard D. Wyckoff
  67. You can be a Stock Market Genius - Joel Greenblatt
Read all of them. -- But don't expect any one book to basically instantly make you rich.

It's important you establish a general, well-rounded, and open-minded foundation to the market.
From there, you'll start to slowly see and realize a faint glimmer of light at the end of the trading tunnel o_O, :confused:

...Kind of like the initial Creation of the Universe...The Big Bang,
You have to appreciate The Game, the Process, the Trade, the Art...don't rush into it...and you'll be a true ET, extraterrestrial trader, -- don't be a fly-by-night bozo trader who will disappear in two months.

2018.
(also keep in mind...wherever you go...99.7% of people are full of crap and/or not successful.)
 
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Notice that. I think the "retired trader" was getting desperate or something.

You know if you watched this documentary "Wall Street Warriors", this deal maker Sandy actually visited a financial astrologer who manages this fund based on Astrology and this book "Astrology and Stock Market Forecasting" actually showed up in the show; it was one of the books that this financial astrologer had on his bookshelf.

When I saw this, I remember I was shouting in my head "Run, Sandy, RUN!!!" LOL
 
Hello everyone,

This is my first post, I ended up finding this forum while searching for a book I own "The way of the Turtle". And Im glad I found it!

The thing is, Im new to trading, got into cryptos for about a year, but Im trading only from what I quickly learned on some videos/tradingview etc.

My portfolio has increased quite nicely and I thought I should be more pro on this. Im a former professional poker player (online mostly), and Im only 25 years old. I feel that I have a chance to make this work.

I got about 70 books from a retired trader that put an ad on a facebook page selling all those books for 5€, I thought the ad was for for me, I grabbed the chance and made 150km to go grab them.

The thing is... They are all old books pretty much, and Im scared to learn outdated stuff.
Still I believe there is some value on it of course, and the aspect of it being real books and helping me stay away from screens a bit seems wonderful.

If someone mind helping me, by pointing me on the right path, I would appreciate it, here is the list of all the books I have:
  1. Trading Commodities & Financial Futures - George Kleinman
  2. Technical Analysis for the Trading Professional - Constance Brown
  3. The Three Skills of Top Trading - Hank Pruden
  4. Options as a Strategic Investment - Lawrence G. McMillan
  5. How I trade for a living - Gary Smith
  6. The Japanese Chart of Charts - Seiki Shimizu
  7. Market Trading Tactics - Daryl Guppy
  8. Cybernetic Trading Strategies - Murray A. Ruggiero, Jr.
  9. Trading Chaos - Bill Williams & Justine Gregory-Williams
  10. Astro-Cycles & Speculative Markets - L. J. Jensen
  11. Gaming the Market - Ronald B. Shelton
  12. Stock Trading Techniques - Michael Harris
  13. Come Into My Trading Room - Dr. Alexander Elder
  14. New Trading Dimensions - Bill Williams,.PHD
  15. Beyond Greed and Fear - Hersh Shefrin
  16. Way of the Turtle - Curtis M. Faith
  17. Design, Testing and Optimization of Trading Systems - Robert Pardo
  18. How I made $2,000,000 In The Stock Market - Nicolas Danvas
  19. The New Fibonacci Trader Workbook - Robert Fischer
  20. Support & Resistance Simplified - Michael C. Thomsett
  21. Tape Reading & Markets Tactics - Humphrey B. Neill
  22. Gann Simplified - Clif Droke
  23. The Market Maker's Edge - Josh Lukeman
  24. Charting the Stock Market - The Wyckoff Method - Jack K. Hutson
  25. Real Options - Tom Copeland / Vladimir Antikarov
  26. Astro-Cycles: The Trader's Viewpoint - Larry Pesavento
  27. Cyclic Analysis - J. M. Hurst
  28. The Opening Price Principle - The Best Kept Secret on Wall Street - Larry Pesavento / Peggy MacKay
  29. Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques - Steve Nison
  30. W. D. Gann Treasure Discovered - Robert Krausz, MH.BCHE
  31. Mastering Elliot Wave - Glenn Neely
  32. Dynamic Trading - Robert C. Miner
  33. The Geometry of Stock Market Profits - Michael S. Jenkins
  34. Quantitative Trading - Ernest P. Chan
  35. Dynamic Trading Indicators - Mark W. Helweg & David C. Stendahl
  36. The Day Trader's Survival Guide - Christopher A. Farrell
  37. The Candlestick Course - Steve Nison
  38. Tolls and Tactics for the Master Day Trader - Oliver Velez & Greg Capra
  39. Technical Analysis and Stock Market Profits - Richard W. Schabacker
  40. Technical Analysis of Stock Trends - Robert D. Edwards and John Magee
  41. Encyclopedia of chart patterns - Thomas N. Bulkowski
  42. Trading Classic Chart Patterns - Thomas N. Bulkowski
  43. The Definitive Guide to Point and Figure - Jeremy du Plessis
  44. Geometry of Markets - Bryce T. Gilmore
  45. Intermarket Analysis - John J. Murphy
  46. Intermarket Technical Analysis - John J. Murphy
  47. New Market Timing Techniques - Thomas R- DeMark
  48. Profitable Candlestick Trading - Stephen W. Bigalow
  49. Pattern Classification - Richard O. Duda / Peter E. Hart / David G. Stork
  50. Selective Forex Trading - Don Snellgrove
  51. Planetary Harmonics of Speculative Markets - Larry Pesavento
  52. Financial Astrology - Lcdr. David Williams
  53. Profitability and Systematic Trading - Michael Harris
  54. Forecasting Financial Markets - Tony Plummer
  55. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Options and Futures - Scott Barrie
  56. The Mathematics of Technical Analysis - Clifford J. Sherry & Jason W. Sherry
  57. How to Read the Financial Pages - Michael Brett
  58. Astrology and Stock Market Forecasting
  59. The Stock Market Barometer - William Peter Hamilton
  60. Study Guide for Technical Analysis Explained - Martin J. Pring
  61. The Four Biggest Mistakes in Option Trading - Jay Kaeppel
  62. Stock Market Technique Number One & Two - Richard D. Wyckoff
  63. How Buffet Does It - James Pardoe
  64. The (Mis)Behaviour of Markets - Benoit B. Mandelbrot and Richard L. Hudson
  65. How I trade and Invest in Stocks and Bonds - Richard D. Wyckoff
  66. Studies in Tape Reading - Richard D. Wyckoff
  67. You can be a Stock Market Genius - Joel Greenblatt

Thank you very much in advance.

Cheers!

You said you were a pro poker player, mostly online. How was your success, especially against online opponents? In online poker, you can't read other players emotions so you have to be able to just process the data quickly to determine your odds of success. Those skill sets would serve you well in trading analysis. Why did you quit?

You'll find that once you've read about 3 or 4 books, you'll be able to read the successive books faster and faster since the vast majority of books all say similar things. You'll be going through them quickly looking for any nuggets of potentially useful information unique to that author.

Before doing any research on available trading information, you may be better served just trying to figure things out based on your own analysis of market behavior. Use a trading sim to experiment and create your set of rules of market movement expectations.

Reading what's been done before can give you ideas, but the con is that it can also limit your thinking on how to find new market solutions by subconsciously boxing yourself into other people's ideas of what works and what doesn't. I found myself repeating the same mistakes over and over and couldn't progress until I realized I had internalized some "market rules" I had read which made me keep throwing out new ideas I came up with that didn't jive with them.

A benefit of past research is making the realization that there is no easy "holy grail" solution printed that you can just apply to start making money, regardless of what the writers claim. The more outrageous the claim of "instant wealth", the more that info is suited for entertainment rather than teaching.

The way the markets work, any method that's easily understood/applied and made available to the public becomes outdated because that information results in people changing their behavior, neutralizing that edge. Any listed method that worked well in the past will most likely not work now. You will ultimately have to develop your own unique edge to achieve consistent success- and that can be extremely difficult to do.

The trading sim is your friend- test your ideas there and prove they can work before risking real capital. Read up on the odds of being a successful trader - it's a heavy grind, and then some.
 
Watch lots of youtube channels on trading. Don't get rid of the books, you can always skim them on the side. Stay away from education courses that fleece thousands from sign ups and teach little of value.

Like mentioned above, throw lots of hours watching markets both in real time and after market hours.
 
Some aspects of market behaviour don't change. Prices go up and down and trend and range and go through congestion just like they always have. At least, that is, on a daily chart. e.g. I am looking at the Dow daily for the year 1900, and Gold for 1920 and I can promise you, they look just like what they do now. Intra-day is different - don't depend on anything as gospel from even 5 years ago.
 
Hello everyone,

This is my first post, I ended up finding this forum while searching for a book I own "The way of the Turtle". And Im glad I found it!

The thing is, Im new to trading, got into cryptos for about a year, but Im trading only from what I quickly learned on some videos/tradingview etc.

My portfolio has increased quite nicely and I thought I should be more pro on this. Im a former professional poker player (online mostly), and Im only 25 years old. I feel that I have a chance to make this work.

I got about 70 books from a retired trader that put an ad on a facebook page selling all those books for 5€, I thought the ad was for for me, I grabbed the chance and made 150km to go grab them.

The thing is... They are all old books pretty much, and Im scared to learn outdated stuff.
Still I believe there is some value on it of course, and the aspect of it being real books and helping me stay away from screens a bit seems wonderful.

If someone mind helping me, by pointing me on the right path, I would appreciate it, here is the list of all the books I have:
  1. Trading Commodities & Financial Futures - George Kleinman
  2. Technical Analysis for the Trading Professional - Constance Brown
  3. The Three Skills of Top Trading - Hank Pruden
  4. Options as a Strategic Investment - Lawrence G. McMillan
  5. How I trade for a living - Gary Smith
  6. The Japanese Chart of Charts - Seiki Shimizu
  7. Market Trading Tactics - Daryl Guppy
  8. Cybernetic Trading Strategies - Murray A. Ruggiero, Jr.
  9. Trading Chaos - Bill Williams & Justine Gregory-Williams
  10. Astro-Cycles & Speculative Markets - L. J. Jensen
  11. Gaming the Market - Ronald B. Shelton
  12. Stock Trading Techniques - Michael Harris
  13. Come Into My Trading Room - Dr. Alexander Elder
  14. New Trading Dimensions - Bill Williams,.PHD
  15. Beyond Greed and Fear - Hersh Shefrin
  16. Way of the Turtle - Curtis M. Faith
  17. Design, Testing and Optimization of Trading Systems - Robert Pardo
  18. How I made $2,000,000 In The Stock Market - Nicolas Danvas
  19. The New Fibonacci Trader Workbook - Robert Fischer
  20. Support & Resistance Simplified - Michael C. Thomsett
  21. Tape Reading & Markets Tactics - Humphrey B. Neill
  22. Gann Simplified - Clif Droke
  23. The Market Maker's Edge - Josh Lukeman
  24. Charting the Stock Market - The Wyckoff Method - Jack K. Hutson
  25. Real Options - Tom Copeland / Vladimir Antikarov
  26. Astro-Cycles: The Trader's Viewpoint - Larry Pesavento
  27. Cyclic Analysis - J. M. Hurst
  28. The Opening Price Principle - The Best Kept Secret on Wall Street - Larry Pesavento / Peggy MacKay
  29. Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques - Steve Nison
  30. W. D. Gann Treasure Discovered - Robert Krausz, MH.BCHE
  31. Mastering Elliot Wave - Glenn Neely
  32. Dynamic Trading - Robert C. Miner
  33. The Geometry of Stock Market Profits - Michael S. Jenkins
  34. Quantitative Trading - Ernest P. Chan
  35. Dynamic Trading Indicators - Mark W. Helweg & David C. Stendahl
  36. The Day Trader's Survival Guide - Christopher A. Farrell
  37. The Candlestick Course - Steve Nison
  38. Tolls and Tactics for the Master Day Trader - Oliver Velez & Greg Capra
  39. Technical Analysis and Stock Market Profits - Richard W. Schabacker
  40. Technical Analysis of Stock Trends - Robert D. Edwards and John Magee
  41. Encyclopedia of chart patterns - Thomas N. Bulkowski
  42. Trading Classic Chart Patterns - Thomas N. Bulkowski
  43. The Definitive Guide to Point and Figure - Jeremy du Plessis
  44. Geometry of Markets - Bryce T. Gilmore
  45. Intermarket Analysis - John J. Murphy
  46. Intermarket Technical Analysis - John J. Murphy
  47. New Market Timing Techniques - Thomas R- DeMark
  48. Profitable Candlestick Trading - Stephen W. Bigalow
  49. Pattern Classification - Richard O. Duda / Peter E. Hart / David G. Stork
  50. Selective Forex Trading - Don Snellgrove
  51. Planetary Harmonics of Speculative Markets - Larry Pesavento
  52. Financial Astrology - Lcdr. David Williams
  53. Profitability and Systematic Trading - Michael Harris
  54. Forecasting Financial Markets - Tony Plummer
  55. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Options and Futures - Scott Barrie
  56. The Mathematics of Technical Analysis - Clifford J. Sherry & Jason W. Sherry
  57. How to Read the Financial Pages - Michael Brett
  58. Astrology and Stock Market Forecasting
  59. The Stock Market Barometer - William Peter Hamilton
  60. Study Guide for Technical Analysis Explained - Martin J. Pring
  61. The Four Biggest Mistakes in Option Trading - Jay Kaeppel
  62. Stock Market Technique Number One & Two - Richard D. Wyckoff
  63. How Buffet Does It - James Pardoe
  64. The (Mis)Behaviour of Markets - Benoit B. Mandelbrot and Richard L. Hudson
  65. How I trade and Invest in Stocks and Bonds - Richard D. Wyckoff
  66. Studies in Tape Reading - Richard D. Wyckoff
  67. You can be a Stock Market Genius - Joel Greenblatt

Thank you very much in advance.

Cheers!

This is where you start feeling your youth, I have read like 90% of them, even the astrology books have some degree of expanding your skills. Book are like anything else, if you are beginning to be a car mechanic-you reading manuals and mainly working on American made cars, why not check out Japanese car manuals? Might learn something but what it might do is trigger ideas to do further testing. And no matter what, you going to have to spend that 10,000 hours watching the screen anyway, but at least formulate ideas to test, yes learn programming well.

The best is 20/24/40/41/42/62/65 and get rid of 5/8/18/47/55.

The rest are ok for expanding your mind, knowledge, if you don't find most of trading to be interesting and only doing it for the money, you going to have a tough go at it.

Xela put together an outstanding group of books and she is a profession and very knowledgeable gal on trading.

I was also trading at your age ... (on demo, at first) ...

If it helps, this was how I learned ...

(a) By reading well-recommended, well-established, mainstream, orthodox trading textbooks, published by well-recommended, well-established, mainstream, orthodox publishers (i.e. "peer-reviewed" and "quality controlled") and avoiding internet "information";

(b) By getting in thousands of hours of screen-time after understanding all the basics of probability and statistics that any trader has to learn, to become profitable (so that my first 3 years' experience was genuinely 3 years' experience rather than the same one month's experience repeated 36 times over);

(c) By remaining aware, at all times, that in a field of endeavour with a huge turnover of participants very few of whom ever achieve profitability, most of the readily available "information", and especially the apparent consensuses of opinion, are always far more likely to be misguided than helpful;

(d) By having expert tuition available (from a successful family member in the trade);

(e) By NOT trading with real money until I'd proven, repeatedly and exhaustively and exhaustingly, on demo accounts, that I could avoid the five classic mistakes of aspiring traders, which are ...
  1. Not having a genuine edge (for which a common reason is reliance on inadequate, defective or mistaken "information": aspiring traders quite commonly seek short-cuts, imagining that if they just copy something that "works", they'll be able to bypass most of the actually-required education and experience phases);

    2. Confusing entry-methods with trading systems (for which a common reason is the deeply mistaken - but widely-held - impression that if one enters at a good time, everything else will somehow, magically "work out well" even without specifically considering trade-management subsequent to the entry- it won't);

    3. Under-capitalisation (for which a common reason is a misguided belief-set about what's typically achievable and over what time-frame: most people significantly overestimate what they can achieve quickly and easily, while significantly underestimating what they could achieve slowly and with difficulty);

    4. Excessive position-sizing (for which a common reason is just a general lack of statistical/probabilistic knowledge - most people aren't mathematically gifted, and it's really, really difficult to make a success of trading without some real understanding of the statistics and probabilities involved);

    5. Lack of patience, discipline and "psychological aspects" (on which I'm far too Aspergerish to be able or willing to comment further, myself, as I happen to have more patience and discipline than almost anyone else - and nearly pathologically so!).

Those five may also overlap, to some extent. I can't prove a word of it, needless to say, but I very strongly suspect that combinations of these five reasons, collectively, probably account for about 99% of all "aspiring trader failure".





These are the books that most helped me, and enabled me to trade profitably ...

Profitability & Systematic Trading (Michael Harris)

Trade Your Way to Financial Freedom (Van K. Tharp - an outstanding starting-point, especially the second half of the book)

Beyond Technical Analysis (Tushar S. Chande)

Understanding Price Action (Bob Volman)

The Mathematics of Money Management: Risk Analysis Techniques for Traders Ralph Vince (we all need some reliable understanding of what's in this book, although not necessarily from this specific source, before trading with real money)

Naked Forex: High-Probability Techniques for Trading Without Indicators (Alex Nekritin & Walter Peters - worth reading even if you don't intend to trade forex)

Daytrading (Joe Ross) (this is an updated re-issue of an earlier book - "Trading by the Minute", I think it was called)

Trading The Ross Hook (Joe Ross) (I keep coming back to this one again and again, because it's simple and logical and helpful, and the whole concept is based on one of the soundest principles of price action trading, namely "buy the dips in an uptrend and sell the rallies in a downtrend")

A Mathematician Plays The Market (John Allen Paulos)

Fooled By Randomness (Nassim Nicholas Taleb - very worthwhile!)

Why People Believe Weird Things (Michael Shermer) - this book and Taleb's, just above, are hugely helpful - albeit indirectly - for "understanding what's going on in forums"!

Trading Price Action Trends - Technical Analysis of Price Charts Bar by Bar for the Serious Trader (Al Brooks)

Trading Price Action Trading Ranges - Technical Analysis of Price Charts Bar by Bar for the Serious Trader (Al Brooks)

Trading Price Action Reversals - Technical Analysis of Price Charts Bar by Bar for the Serious Trader (Al Brooks)

"Warning": Al Brooks' set of three textbooks is kind of badly written and very badly edited (especially considering who the publisher is), and pretty difficult to plough through, but their content's excellent and was super-helpful to me, so those are a kind of "mixed recommendation": I actually think his online video course is much, much better and more helpful and more approachable, but it's also more expensive ($250, I think - but that's still very good value, in my opinion, for about 37 hours of instructional videos).
 
knowledge gained through experience is far superior and many times more useful than bookish knowledge.I think one must start trading with a little amount and refers few books.you can also take advice from financial advisory companies that will help you in making money through trading.
 
@Turiacus

You seem like a good guy who wants to put a lot of effort, so if I may say something:

1. Maybe you shoul at first focus on one type of market ? You have books about all the stuff. Look at some markets and try to decide if you would like to trade stocks, commodieties, other futures, options ? And if you decide then go deeper - what sector of stocs you want to focus on ? or which commodities ? wich futures ? options on what ? Not everything at once. Of course you need some understanding of all markets to have a wider picture. An you can use many markets to trade good ideas using different types of it. But start from scratch.

2. That's good that you would like to have many skills and tools to trade. But it is just one part of the coin. You need to check what works on what market better. What doesn't work at all etc. etc. It is a lot of work and will come with time. Maybe you should check what guys in banks or prop firms, hedge funds have on their screens ? to have any idea where to start ?

3. Trading it's about recognising patterns, knowlage and skills in using tools you have. It is just my opinion but I won't use any astrological stuff, Gann, Fibonacci (in fact I won't use technical analysis). At least not as the main source of my decisions. I don't know what kind of trader you would like to be. Very short time, short time, swing, long term ? But still you should think about what other participatns are doing, how they react, spot how your market behave in different situations/ differetn time of the day. Learn to spot patterns, think about correlations and how to use them. How people execute orgers in particular markets.

4. Of course books can help you but let be honest - it is addition. And you need to know 1 thing. you are getting into bs business - and I am not talking about trading. I'm talking about courses/books selling business. 99% of those people can't trade. They will trying to convince you to all they have to get your money. Remember their bread is from selling you something, not from you making money on markets. I will reccomend you books if you want. Go and grab "Fooled by randomness" and "The Black Swan" from Taleb, go and grab "Technical analysis and the active trader" and "The End of The Bull" by Gary Norden, go and read "Market Wizards" and "New Market Wizards" from Schwager, go grab "Reminiscences of Stock Operator" from Lefevre. It is funny, that so manny people have no idea about Taleb and Norden books but all of those guys know Murphys "Technical Analysis". I won't reccomend you to go this way. Bu this is just my opinion.

It's very deep subject...
 
You sure you don't want to keep "Astro-Cycles & Speculative Markets - L. J. Jensen" and "Planetary Harmonics of Speculative Markets - Larry Pesavento" or "Astrology and Stock Market Forecasting"? Those tea leaves are mighty useful... :sneaky:
Based on the advice in these books, I find winning on 4 out of 7 trades... sometimes 3 out of 5.

I remember when the moon aligned with Venus, AND Jupiter aligned with Mars. The VIX went into a spin-cycle!
 
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