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Strategies & Market Trends : DAYTRADING Fundamentals

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To: hypostomus who wrote (14463)10/14/2001 2:21:16 PM
From: OZ  Read Replies (2) of 18137
 
Count your blessings if Douglas makes no sense to you.

I have to disagree with that one completely. Though I do believe that you can find some very precise and technical traders that only take a trade when every single thing in the world is in alignment that manage to eek out a living. These traders really feel they have to be right almost every time even if it is at the cost of missing out on so many other good trades and they probably could not make sense of this book. Though I do think that this kind or trading is valid too, if it is what they feel comfortable with and do not mind the limitation on making large sums of money.

I think that ANY truly great trader that really trades hard, with frequency and/or size and that manages to really pull large sums out of the markets would totally see the book as making complete sense. I think that if someone is a full time trader, they can see where the valuable information is in the book and filter out the parts about "negative ions in tears" stuff. I pretty much choked when I read that and a few other parts too. The problem is that the golden concept in the book is so simple (therefore likely to be true) that the author was compelled to add too much to it to make it into a book. I think that someone that is not in this field full time and seeing the intraday movements in real time cannot appreciate the dangerous effects these have on the mind of a trader. I also think that for me, the book could have been 3 or 4 chapters long and I would still have been able to have integrated the whole thing since the main ideas were so simple and fit so well with what I have seen. Though I do see that there are those, based on individual experience levels and aptitude, that would need the whole thing and maybe even the other book and perhaps even more.

His work is not directed at consistently successful traders, but at failing or erratic ones, or at wannabees becoming gonnabees

I think the the warmest market for this book is for the really good traders wanting to become one of the great traders. Though any great trader would enjoy it.

Oz
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