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Strategies & Market Trends : A.I.M Users Group Bulletin Board -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: OldAIMGuy who wrote (4941)7/1/1998 10:53:00 AM
From: D VanSwol  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 18928
 
Tom,
I vote for keeping the IW internals in your newsletter as it gives me a better feel for what's happening. I haven't had time to quantify their relation to market forcasting. Thanks for all the good work.

--Dennis--



To: OldAIMGuy who wrote (4941)7/3/1998 5:51:00 PM
From: Bruce A. Bowman  Respond to of 18928
 
As always, Tom, a terrific writeup. I know you've covered this part of the IW before, but I definitely needed the refresher.

There's no doubt in my mind that the IW is the best LT market indicator I've seen. The only thing to come close are the market signals generated by AIQ software, and those are strictly ST to IT, plus they can whipsaw. And of course AIQ signals don't suggest cash reserve levels for new AIM accounts.

I for one like to see the internals of the IW, so I vote for keeping them. Like others, I like to see how the picture comes together.

Bruce



To: OldAIMGuy who wrote (4941)7/3/1998 8:17:00 PM
From: Dataminer1  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 18928
 
My first attempt at journalism:

"AIM"ing for investing profits on the Internet.

That is the goal of a small and diverse web community who use an investing technique invented in a book that is over 20 years old and somewhat obscure. The title "How To Make $1Million in the Stock Market Automatically" by author Robert Lichello (available at both Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble), was often not taken seriously by the investing community due to it's flamboyant name.
That has changed recently with the proliferation of "AIM" related websites, users groups, and software for implementing the tedious strategy known as "Automatic Investment Management". The calculations were originally performed on paper, which probably explains why it never caught on much when it was invented. The investing technique is based on mathematics rather than emotions and is programmed to "buy low and sell high", trading around a core holding of a stock.
Judging from the increasing interest by investors on the Internet, there is a growing population that swears by the concept of the system and use it to manage their real life portfolios. Examples of stocks invested in "AIM" abound on the Internet and hundreds of web pages are devoted to the discussion of the technique.
Whether this investing system invented before the PC takes the world by storm remains to be seen but it is sure to gain increasing attention in the ever-growing world of personal investing. Having survived over 20 years of scrutiny, it is still being used.

Below is a list of relevant sites containing additional information:

AIM users group homepage:
execpc.com

"Uncle Fred's" Buy/Sell system:
az.com

Silicon Investor AIM thread:
Subject 12596

Stocksystem.com:
stocksystem.com

Newport Programs:
execpc.com

JJJ Investing Services:
jjjinvesting.com

Anyone have any other links..??