%%William was a true Icon.
Exactly;
like Carl Ichan, WO'N maybe more so


I dont think he used RSI much @ all, even though a stopped grandad cukoos clock maybe worth some bid to metal$ dealer
%%William was a true Icon.


Interesting, FFTY is a bit better than SPY benchmark, 2023 YTD;It's a bull market for me!
Many breakouts moving up, a few faltering, sputtering, or outright failing.
I don't abide by the CNBC/CNN definition of bull and bear markets (20% up = bull and 20% down = bear). Stupidest thing I ever heard.
I watch individual stocks. I build my watchlist largely off the stocks that have big weekly moves on volume. If it also has big earnings growth, big sales growth, or a great story (even though sales/earnings lacking) it hits my watch list. So long as the general market is acting right on a weekly and monthly basis, I am on a shopping "spree."
I use IBD mostly for the weekly "Stocks on the Move" table, however that newspaper is a great source of trade ideas throughout its pages, and I do get them from all over its pages.


Interesting, FFTY is a bit better than SPY benchmark, 2023 YTD;
but every FFTY year available. 2016-2022, SPY has done much better.
%%I think FFTY is just a gimmick to make money for money managers.
Honestly, all someone really needs is Darvas. If someone were to sit down with Darvas's book and then each weekend go through a list of the top 10 movers for the week, eventually he should figure out how to make money. Big money, that is.


Market Historian John Boik who has studied and written about all the greatest Traders of all time says William O'Neil is the greatest Trader of all time. Yes, greater than Livermore.
%%Hard to say if that is factually accurate. John Boik owes his entire writing career to William O'Neil.


Imagine if O'Neil didn't start IBD/Daily Graphs and stayed a Trader rather than a Businessman.Hard to say if that is factually accurate. John Boik owes his entire writing career to William O'Neil.
Imagine if O'Neil didn't start IBD/Daily Graphs and stayed a Trader rather than a Businessman.
Starting IBD would've been such a distraction to his Trading.
I'm not arguing that O'Neil was the greatest Trader of all time. Just stating that:One must decide how one will define "greatest" with respect to this activity we call trading. I prefer to focus on retail people. I'm pro-everyman and pro-everywomen.
For myself, Navinder Singh Sarao and Kristjan Kullamägi get my votes in the post-millennial era.
Darvas, imo, was the best of the post-war traders.
O'Neil took $5000 and ran it up to $200,000 and used that to fund his institutional investment advisory service, out of which IBD would eventually sprout.
I have no doubt that O'Neil was an excellent institutional money manager during the rest of his career, and he trained a number of very successful institutional traders as well.
But the stories that matter to me are the little guys who started with $5000 to $25,000 and ran it to millions (and kept it) or even tens of millions.
I have huge respect and admiration for William O'Neil. He's certainly in the top XX of all traders in the era of the existence of the NYSE.
But the top X in my own personal Pantheon of Traders of excellence, has people like the Sarao and Kullamägi.