Financial Times Guides to Technical Analysis: How to Trade like a Professional
$17.60
Author(s) | |
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Format |
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Pages |
261 |
Published Date |
2012 |
Beginning with the very basics of technical analysis and market price behaviour, Financial Times Guides to Technical Analysi teaches you how to apply these concepts and principles to your own trading. With this comprehensive and straight talking guide you will soon be using the same successful techniques and formulas as the professionals.
Introduction:
Technical analysis is the study of price patterns to identify trading opportunities; it is about charting data and interpreting charts using technical tools and techniques. These techniques are instilled into formulas which are called mechanical trading systems in accordance with specific trading plans. Good trading plans encompass the estimations of traders’ rewards and risks. Very good trading plans specify the strategies for entry and risk control management. Essentially, good trading plans are part of good money management.
Technical analysis, one of the most important investment subjects, is what every investor needs to learn before making any trading decisions, especially in regard to the timing of a purchase or sale of any financial asset. Every wise investor knows that each financial market has its own cycles, and making abnormal, exceptional profits is all about knowing and following the patterns of these seasons.
This book is all about guiding the average investor to use the right technical indicators to detect these timings in order to make exceptional profits. It is about how you can distinguish yourself from the crowd and make exceptional profits using not only the given tools in this book but also tools that you, yourself, have invented.
The Financial Times Guide to Technical Analysis will appeal to anyone interested in the stock and futures markets. It is a succinct professional trading guide for the individual serious investor, whether an amateur or someone with some knowledge of investment. It begins with a guided tour of the world of investing and gives practical advice on trading opportunities and the corresponding appropriate strategies using well-known and newly innovated technical analysis concepts.
Contents:
- Know the market: how to read and construct charts
- History has a habit of repeating itself
- Spot the bubbles and win
- Follow the winners: trading with the trend
- The tools that professionals use
- Leading technical indicators in the market
- The profit opportunities
- Wave after wave
- Booms and busts: risks and returns
- The secret
- Technical indicators to use
- Principles of a technical algorithm trading system
- Understanding market characteristics and what to do
- Simple formulas to design your own trading models
- Programming trading rules into your system
- How to write a good trading plan
- Losing a little to gain your capital
- Practise stop loss
- Fine tuning the trading wheel
- The total trader – winning trading psychology
Financial Times Guides to Technical Analysis: How to Trade like a Professional By Jacinta Chan pdf
13 reviews for Financial Times Guides to Technical Analysis: How to Trade like a Professional
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Clark Krueger (verified owner) –
Far better than most on this subject
Chance Booker (verified owner) –
Informative and easy to read. The mystery of technical analysis become a lot clearer!
Liliana Reeves (verified owner) –
Best book of this category I got. Explains all bases concepts very well. No fat like in so many other books.
Raegan Santiago (verified owner) –
Truer words have never been spoken.
I think this book is the worst purchase I have ever made from Sacred Traders.
Remi Xiong (verified owner) –
Made 40% returns on my initial capital within a couple of days of trading, i believe this book did in fact play a huge role helping me identify trends in the market. A must have for anyone wanting to trade on the stock exchange.
Beckham Morrow (verified owner) –
I like this book and the author’s pragmatic approach to trading. It gets straight to the point with various trading tips and strategies without rambling on for hundreds and hundreds of pages like most other popular technical analysis books out there. Although I must say this book is a bit expensive for a book this short hence the 4 star.
Rocky West (verified owner) –
A good read but nothing to getting really appreciate or get excited about!
Reyna McMillan (verified owner) –
Good easy to understand book, but the book has lots of exercises which requires you to log into the FT website, which you can not do without a subscription.
Kamari Lucas (verified owner) –
Very useful for anyone who trades the financial markets, or for anyone thinking of taking it up
Amaris Ortega (verified owner) –
It is a very well written book. It is a well written and has usable suggestion about technical analysis in trading. An issue I have with it is that when it gives give you instructions on practising some of the trading tools, you are not able to use the recommended platform unless you pay more and sign up to the financial times platform. Book is not cheap, so to be used as a marketing tool to get more money is a little less than great.
Azrael Magana (verified owner) –
This book is really good. It helps you get to grips with technical analysis in a very practical way.
I’ve been trading for several years already and I’d say that this book helped to fine-tune my strategy. If you’re a complete beginner to technical analysis, it might take you some time to get through and some parts may be very difficult to understand but it will ultimately outline how to use technical analysis to trade profitably.
I can confirm that my trading business has been more profitable as a result of using this book.
Ahmir Dominguez (verified owner) –
This primer on technical analysis, emphasizing the usefulness of charting and technical indicators, is concise, direct, and well-organized. In spite of its compactness, the author manages to rely on one of the time-honored benchmarks of education: repetition. In each short chapter, she introduces her main points via bullet points, briefly describes her points with graphic examples, and concludes by reproducing her bullet points. A reader could (and this one did) wish for more examples, exceptions to the rule, even anecdotes. A professional trader, the author makes clear which indicators she feels are more reliable than others, and in what contexts each indicator might provide value. While she acknowledges that a trade has a 50-50 chance going either in your direction or the other, she states that a disciplined, knowledgeable trader can tilt the odds in his favor by deploying a mechanical, scientific method to his trading. This book aims to equip the reader with that method. A good introduction to the topic, but with a British bias. Helpful links to the Financial Times for additional information and interactive charting.
Nataly Moyer (verified owner) –
Good book, has some helpful information, but I’m not sure if her system will work on multiple markets and she leaves the last key to the reader to figure out.