Tactical Trading in the Commodity Markets

In some of my earlier posts I spoke about Tactical trading in Commodity futures. I want to provide you an example that is occurring right now in commodity futures trading. This is not from one of those web sites with commodity tips. This is real trading in a commodity market with a real commodity trade.

The premise of tactical trading is to identify the strongest markets as well as the weakest. When I look at over 80 markets all over the world it can become evident on a relative basis which markets are the strongest and weakest. Once these markets are identified my liquidity can be focused on these commodity markets or forex markets. However with this said, this does not guarantee to the slightest if the commodity trade will work ( as well as forex trade).

The goal of tactical trading is to find new trends…or more better said put us in a position to be able to Trend follow in the commodities market. Also bear in mind even with the filter of identifying the strongest and weakest markets I have many small loses in commodities trading. There is no way to prevent these losses and do not faze me.

Sugar has been a standpoint recently. When this trade was put on I had no opinion about sugar nor do I know anything about sugar other than it is sweet. Currently sugar has been moving in the commodities market (think about what this might mean for inflation??). Money is made by trend following trends that exist for long periods of time in commodities trading. The idea is make one available for any and all opportunities yet manage the risks. Currently there are substantial profits in sugar not just in our trading but as well as with other commodity trading advisors that we have allocated money to as well. What is interesting is when the sugar trade occurred we entered the trade two days after one of our colleagues who is also a commodity trading advisor did. We think alike yet we do have different trades at times. The main point however is how we both approach risk .We know that anything can happen. We are always trying to guard ourselves against something that no one would ever think of.. This is the idea of the Black Swan with Nissim Taleb.
No one knows when a trend starts or more importantly stops in the commodities market. The idea of tactical trading is more a filter to guide your capital and focus it and benefit when there is a rare substantial move starts in the commodity markets.

Andrew Abraham
www.myinvestorsplace.com

Futures trading involves risk. People can and do lose money

Tagged with:
 

Snp Genotyping And Analysis Markets

SNP Genotyping and Analysis Markets
 
 Because SNPs (single nucleotide polymorphisms),are the most common type of genetic variation between human beings. These single base pair mutations at specific DNA sequence sites, can be ideal for the task of hunting for correlations between genotype and behavior or quality exhibited by a living organism. The use of SNP analysis has spread into numerous areas in recent years. But diagnostics and pharmacogenomics are the most promising applications, and market watchers in diagnostics, pharmaceutical, biotechnology and related instrument industries will want to watch developments in SNP analysis closely. ( http://www.bharatbook.com/detail.asp?id=131988&rt=SNP-Genotyping-and-Analysis-Markets.html )
 
 Analyst Justin Saeks has taken a detailed look into the market for DNA Sequencing Equipment, as well as Gene Expression Profiling Systems. Now, in His report SNP Genotyping and Analysis Markets he looks at SNP analysis instruments, reagents, and related software and services, providing information critical to having an understanding of the business behind this new technology:
 
 * Overview of SNPs, their Applications and Key SNP Analysis Methods
 * Current Market Size and Estimates of Future Growth
 * Impact of the GWAS ‘First Round’ on the Market
 * Estimates of Revenues by Region (North America, Europe and ROW) and By Product Type (Consumable, Instruments, Software)
 * Complete List of SNP-Related Deals Made Between Companies Since 2002
 * Exhaustive Review of Products on the Market
 * Market Share of Major Companies in SNP Analysis
 * Discussion of GOLD Database Projects, Government Involvement and Funding
 * Corporate Profiles
 * Regulatory, Technology and Industry Trends as well as;
 * Twelve Challenges the Market Faces and Eight Strategic Recommendations for Companies in the SNP Analysis Market
 
 While the market is expected to create opportunities for growth, the SNP Genotyping and Analysis market is not without its challenges. The report tackles the following trends:
 
 * Rapid Rate of Product Introductions
 * Increased Multiplexing Creates Improved Products
 * End-Users Attracted to Larger-Scale SNP Platforms
 * Accelerating Discoveries Create Volatile Market
 * Diagnostic Market Holds Obstacles For New Innovations
 * Complexity of Biological Systems Requires Multiple Techniques
 * Miniaturization of Equipment and Instruments
 
 SNP Genotyping and Analysis Markets is the result of a primary research effort. An analyst with experience following the biotech instrument industry researching all available sources and contacting industry experts and end users to obtain real market insights. Strategic Planners, Marketing Directors, Business Development Executives are among the individuals who will benefit from this resource.
 
 To know more and to buy a copy of your report feel free to visit : http://www.bharatbook.com/detail.asp?id=131988&rt=SNP-Genotyping-and-Analysis-Markets.html
 
 Or
 
 Contact us at :
 
 Bharat Book Bureau
 Tel: +91 22 27578668
 Fax: +91 22 27579131
 Email: info@bharatbook.com
 Website: www.bharatbook.com
 Blog: http://bharatbookresearch.blogspot.com
 Follow us on twitter: http://twitter.com/3bbharatbook

Tagged with:
 

The Stock Market’s Red Glare

The Whitney Theater (Hamden, CT) marquee advertised movies for children (“Gidget”…”The High and the Mighty”). Every kids matinee, the manager would pick a ticket out of a large popcorn box. He would give the winner candy, free soda and popcorn, or a toy connected to the movie.

One afternoon he read the numbers on my ticket stub. The prize was an air-pumped rocket. My friend Elly and I went to an open field, pumped it as hard as we could, and let it go. It went straight up, stalled, lost momentum, nose-dived and hit the sidewalk.

Stock Markets soar and crash too. Stock Market traders sometimes become kids with a toy. Every day the market pumps itself up. Indices spiral upward making many giddy with kiddish delight; nobody wants this rocket to fall from its lofty heights. With little notice, the market stalls, momentum is lost, and markets crash.

Simple laws of gravity inform us that upward moves of any force require energy and momentum. The stock market is ruled by the same laws. Markets cannot, will not, and have not moved in one direction without correcting. This means that bull markets are not forever, and bear markets are bearable.

“What happened?”

My toy rocket did not give me any warning when falling to reality. Stock markets project warning signs when upward momentum stalls. You never want markets to go up forever. It is best when markets move up, pause, contract, and build a base before making their next move.

A base-line provides support for a market index like the Dow or the S&P. Long support lines give investors solace because it takes a lot of sellers to break through it. A support line or base (see image) is a trading pattern of stock buying and selling with little price change.

No support means the market index has potential to keep falling until it finds a support line/base or bottom. Markets stall when reaching a high price on average daily stock trading volume. Bulls (buyers) will strain to push the markets upward, but Bears (sellers) thwart the momentum. An excessive number of sellers (many more than the average) can force an index/stock to new lows.

“Make it go higher!”

My toy rocket did not reach heights too fast. Elly and I were ten or eleven years old; we wanted that rocket to disappear in the clouds. Many investors act the same way; they want the markets to go up and up because it means more money. When markets hit successive days of positive returns, investors get starry-eyed. We like it when Neil Cavuto (among others) reports new highs for the Dow (read ” The Dow Jones Industrial Average: Failing the Average Investor” by Steven Selengut).

Dizzying heights cause most investors to miss subtle market moves. Stocks/indices must move higher on strong buying volume. When markets reach a bench-marked high level, getting past it will take three times the average number of daily buyers.If the price stalls at the bench-marked high and the buying volume is less than the daily average, index prices decline.

“Don’t worry.”

Elly never worried; I always worried. When that rocket went off, I feared it would break a window or hurt someone. Elly said, “Just pump it Ray and let it go!” Some stock investors never worry. Wise Wall Streeters know that “The market needs to climb a wall of worry.” War, high oil prices, poor consumer sentiment, and Federal Reserve rate increases are walls of worry. Euphoric investors topple markets.

Something to Fear

The Vix Index is the “fear index” When the Vix spikes, worry increases; when the Vix is down, optimism is excessive. Today, May 22, 2006), the Vix spiked. The VIX “is a good indicator of the level of fear or greed in U.S. and global capital markets. When investors are fearful, the VIX level is significantly higher than normal.” (Antognelli, Ferreira, McArdle, and Traub. “Fear and Greed in Global Asset Allocation.” The Journal of Investing. (Spring 2000), pp. 27 – 32). Every rocket must return to earth for refueling. I learned this with my friend Elly and my toy rocket.

Want to build a toy rocket? Gary Rollins tells you how in his articleBuilding A Model Rocket Can Be A Great Learning Experience

Tagged with:
 

Beginner question here: Ok, the U.S. has the DOW, which gives you an idea of how major blue-chip companies are doing. It is also a pretty good gauge of the overall market. (with exceptions….)

What is the equivalent of the DOW in foreign markets, and are most of them also in a recession?

-Newbie to investing

Tagged with:
 

Stock Markets are Not Democratic

The stock market is not democratic. Changes in the stock market, far from being an honest representation of the state of the nation’s economy, are nothing more than a barometer for the wealthy, educated elite whose fortunes are tied to Wall Street’s performance, while the great majority of the population become spectators in increasing numbers with every advance or decline. Psychology, technology, education and social status all have become barriers preventing the equitable distribution of the gifts of regulated equities, and worse, perpetuate the imbalance by their very nature.

In the stock market, the rich get richer while the rest…just think they do.

There is an unspoken myth that participation in the stock market is wide and deep in America, and that its fortunes are egalitarian – truly a democracy open to all, and with an even shot at bonanza. In a sense, Wall Street has come to define America, and the equality of opportunity it represents. No matter how humble of station, the American dream is available through prudent investment in the stock market over the long term.

The mainstream media in the United States supports this supposition, the rise of business and investment shows, finance segments in news broadcasts, and daily headlines covering every joyous or threatening tilt in the great pinball machine. Finance news has become a growth industry, predicated as it is on the increasing desire of wider groups of viewers for immediate and insightful news and analysis. On the web, sex is still king, with finance porn coming up behind. A noun, a verb, and a stock symbol will get your blog readers almost as fast as a scantily clad avatar.

Only a third of Americans participate in the stock market through the ownership of stocks in one way or another. While that’s a lot of people, it certainly is not the strong majority that a democracy assumes. Still, changes in stock market performance do affect thirty-five percent of the population directly. However the math suggests that the best such a wide group can do in a pseudo zero sum game is to track the changes, their returns never being anything better than average.

Real increases in wealth occur in smaller, segmented sections of the stock buying population as a whole. Owning stocks alone is no guarantee of success.

For most of the stock owning public, stock ownership arrives through the back door, in market products that pool resources like mutual funds, or in market incentives like retirement tax breaks that accompany the buying of stocks in the way 401(k) plans do. People invest for the tax break, and consider the risk small or non-existent that their equity investments in stocks will melt away. They are not stock market investors as much as they are tax break investors.

In terms of risk ownership – where higher risks mean greater potential rewards – the vast amount of stock holding Americans have insulated themselves from the great rewards of stock ownership, by falsely believing their low risk, widely spread holdings will return more than low, widely spread rewards. For people who own mutual funds, automated 401(k) plans, or received stock in the company they work for, the nature and motivation of their investment condemns them to the law of averages, existing always on the fat part of the curve. They will never beat the market, as they are the market.

And while most consider the rapid, inexorable advance of the value of the Dow an important way to have their investments participate in the great game of easy wealth creation, that too is an illusion. Despite its impressive scorecard, the stock market has only averaged a real rate of return of about 4% over the long term, once adjusted for inflation. Hardly the get rich quick – or slow – scheme many believe.

Direct stock market participation is the only way to get out from under the curve, and have any realistic shot at beating inflation and adding real, sports car buying, holiday taking, coke snorting “wealth”.

Pulling together the money, reading a bit about what you are doing, tracking down a broker, and selecting from thousands of stocks to individually purchase in minimum board lots is not something Americans do in any great, relative number. According to the Federal Reserve Board “Survey of Consumer Finances”, only about 18% of stock market participation is done in this fashion. Less than one in five Americans has taken the opportunity to work the American dream directly, and pit their guts and faith against the odds.

Certainly, the advances in online technology over the last decade have made stock market participation wider, what with the profusion of discount brokers and do it yourself, on line stock trading. Wall Street For Dummies. Yet, direct participation in the market has only progressed not much beyond the 18% of 2007, from the 13% of 1991. It has never been easier to buy stocks, and with two major booms, so few people availed themselves the chance to ride the big one. Clearly, the stock market does not represent America, where 80% of the population is not participating directly in the fortunes of the corporate assets of the country, and are not a participating part of a fundamental of free market capitalism.

Contemporary culture is slathered in headlines of Wall Street, the DOW, and NASAQ, giving the impression of a country deeply wired to the fortunes of the market across all demographic spectrums. Stock market participation analysis however, clearly identifies serious barriers to entry that make Wall Street a decidedly closed, club.

A closed club of rich, educated men in high status occupations.

Wealth (like male pattern baldness), is inherited. If you are clever enough to be born to rich, beautiful parents, odds are you are clever enough to have your own kids repeat the trick. Progeny of wealthy households inherit much more than trust accounts. The basic knowledge and principles of the responsibility for all that family capital comes with the suitcase. Other folks, who lack both the capital and the joie de vive, make their first market acquisition from a decidedly disadvantaged place. In a very undemocratic fashion, a major barrier to entry appears to be to whom you were born.

The Federal Reserve Board Survey of Consumer Finances also reveals it’s better to be born a male. Men dominate the world of finance, and women have a long way to go, as you are more than twice as likely to be a man if you invest directly in the stock market.

Education also forms a barrier, as there is a direct correlation between rates of stock market participation and levels of schooling. Not surprisingly, the world of finance being a complex and disciplined world, better-educated Americans are over represented in the markets. Thirty five per cent of College graduate households owned stocks, more than all other classes combined. Easy access to transparent information is a necessary part of an informed market decision, and college grads it appears, know how to find it.

Another trait shared amongst the wealthy, smart and male is high status occupations. It turns out very few wealthy, well-educated men work in the bowels of fast food, and very few shopping cart handlers invest in stocks to any degree. While no studies exist to support this kind of detail, one imagines the most popular job description amongst stock market participants is “VP of something”.

Just being in the market carries a value added social cache on the greens or at dinner parties, and knowing the lingo is a secret hand shake of sorts on long, transatlantic flights in first class; “Our people are telling me I have to shift more trust liability into higher leveraged, off shore asset classes. Who do you like in Singapore?” If, on the other hand, the big guy in the center seat keeps saying “I gotta go to the can” all through the flight to St. Pete’s, odds are you are not in the markets.

In the end, stocks carry a degree of risk that most Americans prefer to avoid. The greater the degree of risk assumed, the greater the amount of the reward. In this fashion, not just stock market participation, but market profitability are tied to degrees of risk. Those willing and able to shoulder greater risk tend to consolidate and get wealthier, and at rates beyond those whose risk tolerance is just not up to it.

Economic Sociology tells us that both economic disposition and social strata are indicators of higher risk tolerance, and thus are rewarded more regularly with outsized cheques. In essence, stinking rich folks can afford to take it in the teeth occasionally, however embarrassing that may be. Risk takes on another order of magnitude when the difference in a loss is between the polite tut tut’s at the club, and living in your minivan with the family. The opportunity to participate in risk is limited by the objective magnitude of failure.

Behavioural Finance suggests that risk tolerance is also governed by human foibles. Most small investors understand that the markets are a game fixed in favour of the goliath and well connected. This keeps market participation to only the foolhardy, or as researchers have come to know them, gamblers. Gambling requires a certain set of unfortunate human traits; a taste for un-rational risk, and the sad affliction to always overestimate ability and profits, while to simultaneously ignore or rationalize away the losses. Finance is another sport where testosterone plays a deciding role. It’s a male thing.

Entry to Wall Street is barred to those without high levels of economic and social capital. The size and influence of that capital dictates the amount of risk aversion, and acts as a limiter on the opportunity to consolidate great wealth from the markets. In this way, free markets, capitalism, and liberal economics have fashioned a system of wealth and power that is increasingly oligarchic, self perpetuating, and completely undemocratic.

The staggering bull market just ended only served to speed up the process, as boom markets favour those who can push the limits of risk with mountains of capital. The limits of risk apparently being highly leveraged in a head scratching soup of acronyms, with absolutely no idea of what will happen if for once, you were wrong.

The brutal market collapse and general maelstrom of economic disarray in late 2008 laid bare the inequities of free market equity investing. The greater part of America that invested in the markets had their hopes and dreams shattered, and their ability to spend cauterized. That spelled job loss and eviction for the four fifths of the country that was living beyond their means, trying to keep up with a dream they were silently denied entry to, and dependent on the largess of the market investors seemingly endless disposable income.

For those who had the opportunity to take the biggest risks, and for whom those successive risks had ensured survival in an ever-decreasing club of consolidated wealth and power… they all took “haircuts”. For this elite class of investor, boom and bust did little more than jiggle about very big numbers on streams of personal financial statements. If you found you had to sell the home in the Hamptons in the worst real estate market in history, you were not in this class.

Far from spreading wealth, boom markets concentrate gain, and solidify ownership of America’s real power elite. In a crash, the process is the same but brutal, when those without the resources to stay the course and take real risk on recovery are shut out, or worse, lose all faith in the value of risk and the hopelessness of the Wall Street game.

When the Dow Jones Industrial Average rises, who does it benefit? Those with investments in the stock market, who have the social standing and resources to accept the risks that reward so few. The great balance of traders – small, individual traders alone or in groups – can seldom do any better than average – and average barely keeps ahead of inflation. For the two thirds of Americans not in the markets at all, it hardly matters a whiff.

There is nothing democratic about “the markets”.

Tagged with:
 

Nothing we do in society prepares us to function effectively in the commodity markets and an environment with no real boundaries. But, most of us are brought up to function well in society, so we`ve acquired strategies for fulfilling our needs and desires that are geared toward social interaction and acceptance. We don`t just take what we want we take other people into consideration, too. Not only have we learned to depend on each other to fulfill our needs and desires, but in the process we`ve acquired many socially-based techniques for assuring that other people behave in a manner that is consistent with what we want.

The commodity markets may seem like a social endeavour because there are so many people involved, but they`re not. While we may have learned to depend on each other to fulfill basic needs, the market environment is different: it`s every person for themselves.

Not only can you not depend on the market to do anything for you, but it`s extremely difficult to manipulate or control anything that the market does. If you`ve become effective in your personal lives at fulfilling your needs and desires by learning how to control your environment, but are existing as a trader in an environment that does not know, care, or respond to anything that is important to you, what do you do? You take control.

One of the principal reasons so many successful people have failed at trading, is that part of their success, outside the market, is due to their ability to control their social environment. To some degree, everyone has developed techniques to make their external environment meet their needs and desires. The problem is that none of those techniques work with the commodity markets. The commodity markets don`t respond to control and manipulation, unless you`re a very large trader.

However, you can control the way you deal with market information and your own behaviour. Instead of controlling your surroundings so that they fit your idea of the way things should be, you can learn to control yourself. Then you can view information objectively, and choose to behave in a manner that is in your own best interests. You do this by creating rules to trade by, and following them.

Nearly everyone agrees that you need to have rules to be successful in trading, but most traders have no intention of following any. Most people who are interested in trading resist the idea of creating a set of rules. The resistance may be subtle, but it`s still there.

Often this is a response to how we acquired our first set of societal rules. Our parents, relatives, teachers, or friends gave most of the guidelines we live by to us when we were children. These guidelines were taught to us, we did not create them, an important distinction. During this time, many of our natural impulses to move, express, and learn about the nature of our existence through our own direct experiences, were stifled. Some of these impulses were never reconciled, and can still exist inside of us as frustration, or disappointment. The accumulation of these types of feelings can cause a person to resist anything that keeps them from doing whatever they want, whenever they want to.

The very reason most people are attracted to trading, (the unlimited freedom of choice and decision-making inherent in trading), is the same reason they feel a natural resistance to rules and boundaries. The need for rules may make perfect sense, but it`s difficult to generate any enthusiasm for these rules when you`ve been trying to break free of them most of your life. It usually takes a great deal of effort to break down a traders resistance to establishing and abiding by a trading regime that is organized, consistent, and reflects prudent money-management guidelines. But, once they do, the possibilities for attaining consistent trading success are limitless.

Tagged with:
 

109 Niche Markets, Researched & Ready.

Niche Markets Untapped And Ready To Be Dominated.
BUY NOW: 109 Niche Markets, Researched & Ready.

Tagged with:
 

Product Description
Trying to trade stock, bond, commodity and currency markets without intermarket awareness is like trying to drive a car without looking out the side and rear windows—very dangerous. In this guide to intermarket analysis, the author uses years of experience in technical analysis plus extensive charts to clearly demonstrate the interrelationshps that exist among the various market sectors and their importance. You’ll learn how to use activity in surrounding markets in the same way that most people employ traditional technical indicators for directional clues. Shows the analyst how to focus outward, rather than inward, to provide a more rational understanding of technical forces at work in the marketplace.

BUY NOW: Intermarket Technical Analysis: Trading Strategies for the Global Stock, Bond, Commodity, and Currency Markets

Tagged with:
 

  • ISBN13: 9780470477243
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description

The mortgage meltdown: what went wrong and how do we fix it?

Owning a home can bestow a sense of security and independence. But today, in a cruel twist, many Americans now regard their homes as a source of worry and dashed expectations. How did everything go haywire? And what can we do about it now?

In The Rise and Fall of the U.S. Mortgage and Credit Markets, renowned finance expert James Barth offers a comprehensive examination of the mortgage meltdown. Together with a team of economists at the Milken Institute, he explores the shock waves that have rippled through the entire financial sector and the real economy. Deploying an incredibly detailed and extensive set of data, the book offers in-depth analysis of the mortgage meltdown and the resulting worldwide financial crisis. This authoritative volume explores what went wrong in every critical area, including securitization, loan origination practices, regulation and supervision, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, leverage and accounting practices, and of course, the rating agencies. The authors explain the steps the government has taken to address the crisis thus far, arguing that we have yet to address the larger issues.

  • Offers a comprehensive examination of the mortgage market meltdown and its reverberations throughout the financial sector and the real economy
  • Explores several important issues that policymakers must address in any future reshaping of financial market regulations
  • Addresses how we can begin to move forward and prevent similar crises from shaking the foundations of our financial system

The Rise and Fall of the U.S. Mortgage and Credit Markets analyzes the factors that should drive reform and explores the issues that policymakers must confront in any future reshaping of financial market regulations.

BUY NOW: The Rise and Fall of the US Mortgage and Credit Markets: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Market Meltdown

Tagged with:
 

  • ISBN13: 9780137042012
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Description: “This book is an excellent introduction.” As a representative of the art school cons science of technical analysis is the emphasis on practical aspects of map reading and how to translate the information obtained from charts into investment decisions . If you’ve ever wondered what is technical analysis, or how he could start doing is a good place to start. “John Bollinger, CFA, CMT President, Bollinger Capital Management” is the place to find out why the RSI is rising while the price decreases as one moves from a possible epidemic, how not to look a map, with measurement of preconceived notions of what the market can do so to speak – “Let the market ….« The counseling is especially useful. [This] is to have a book, especially in the early stages of your career as an investment. “Michael Smyrk, STA Journal” Finally, an easy to understand, explain how the analysis of technical work! This primer shows how investors can identify trends and patterns in order to win markets, you help them in stock. Are full of practical advice, this is a must for individual investors and professionals. Susie Gharib, Coanchor, PBS Nightly Business Report’s best-selling Introduction to Technical Analysis: Updated with examples, techniques and guidance! Completely updated with a new cover of bubbles, Sector Rotation and rare “Black Swan” events on the markets for technical analysis offers powerful tools for the purpose of picking stocks and making money – and the current market environment makes it more essential than ever. Unfortunately, most technical analysis books are confusing rather than educating investors. This leads simple, practical book completely updated, Barron’s Online Technical Analysis columnist Michael N. Kahn, techniques of technical analysis in plain language that any investor can understand and use evidence. Kahn explains how the technical analysis, then you learn to read charts and translate them into investment decisions. You learn to use technical analysis to determine your current approach to stock selection, which are complementary to share promising and objective assessment of risk and reward. The completely revised third edition includes many new examples reflecting the current market environment changed. It is a comprehensive report is the identification of new bulbs, including real estate (2006), oil (2008) and Bond (2009). Kahn provides powerful new insights into the relationship between technical analysis and market psychology, and it is crucial to up-to-date guidelines for the sector rotation in rapidly changing markets. He has a whole chapter on navigating the chaotic and once-in-a-”Millennium Black Swan” market activity. Why technical analysis worksBringing real objectivity to guide investment decisions Chart Patterns: Show Forest and treesRecognizing markets change, need a break or about to take off you understand the central importance of the price … And what you need to know about the volume, time and the investor sentiment in the street, a taste of candlesticks advanced analysis, cycles, Elliott Wave, and how to expose these guys on TV

BUY NOW: Technical Analysis Plain and Simple: Charting the Markets in Your Language

Tagged with:
 
Page 1 of 3123
© 2010 Pal Market Journal