Saturday, May 13, 2006
How Technical Analysis Works (New York Institute of Finance) (Hardcover)
You can learn about technical analysis in many ways
daily bar chart, weekly bar chart, uptrend line, tick volume, neutral trend, key reversal day, candle chart, double top pattern, failure swing, rising wedge, bullish divergence, breakaway gap, bearish divergence, momentum study, price action, falling wedge, advancing stocks, downtrend line, stochastic indicator, stock breaks, stock rallies, exhaustion gap, sideways trend, advancing issues, moving average line
Prophet Financial Systems, Apr Jul Oct, Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec, Wall Street, Business Machines, Dow Theory, Industry Groups, United States, New York Stock Exchange, Aor Jul Oct, Annual Rate of Return, Joseph Granville, Lowry's Reports, Relative Strength Index, Stan Weinstein
Bruce Kamich has written one of the best books on technical analysis that I've seen in a long time. Unlike most introductory books, it neither over simplifies, nor does it make it seem as if you need a PhD to learn how to use technical analysis. The book explains how and why technical patterns and indicators work in an entertaining way. On top of that, the examples of patterns in the book are not "text book". You actually get to see what these things might look like in the real world instead of the perfect picture you see in most books. This is invaluable. On top of that, the book is a bargain!
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0735202702/ref=pd_sim_b_5/002-4447987-3096861?%5Fencoding=UTF8&v=glance&n=283155
daily bar chart, weekly bar chart, uptrend line, tick volume, neutral trend, key reversal day, candle chart, double top pattern, failure swing, rising wedge, bullish divergence, breakaway gap, bearish divergence, momentum study, price action, falling wedge, advancing stocks, downtrend line, stochastic indicator, stock breaks, stock rallies, exhaustion gap, sideways trend, advancing issues, moving average line
Prophet Financial Systems, Apr Jul Oct, Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec, Wall Street, Business Machines, Dow Theory, Industry Groups, United States, New York Stock Exchange, Aor Jul Oct, Annual Rate of Return, Joseph Granville, Lowry's Reports, Relative Strength Index, Stan Weinstein
Bruce Kamich has written one of the best books on technical analysis that I've seen in a long time. Unlike most introductory books, it neither over simplifies, nor does it make it seem as if you need a PhD to learn how to use technical analysis. The book explains how and why technical patterns and indicators work in an entertaining way. On top of that, the examples of patterns in the book are not "text book". You actually get to see what these things might look like in the real world instead of the perfect picture you see in most books. This is invaluable. On top of that, the book is a bargain!
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0735202702/ref=pd_sim_b_5/002-4447987-3096861?%5Fencoding=UTF8&v=glance&n=283155