Jan 24, 2008

Forex conquered




My goal in this book is to present an easy yet comprehensible set of
trading techniques and reliable trading tactics that you can apply in everyc01.
day trading circumstances. These techniques should help you identify frequently
reoccurring trading opportunities.

Yet to better enhance these techniques,
I will cover why it is important to develop and maintain a systematic
approach based on historical data that is back-tested either visually or by
the aid of a computer or trading software program. The signals and methods
can be applied for long and short positions.

Forex has no restrictions
on selling short, so these trading methods will improve and increase your
trading opportunities because you can trade both long and short strategies.
Imagine a trading product that allows you 24-hour access so you can apply
techniques that will set your stop-loss levels, profit objectives, and various
order types (such as contingency orders and trailing stops) to maximize
your performance.
This is what the forex market offers, including flexible
leverage and commission-free trading.


Rapidshare.

Jan 23, 2008

Van Tharp:Money management




Perhaps the greatest secret to top trading and investing
success is appropriate money management. I call it a
“secret” because few people seem to understand it,
I including many people who’ve written books on the topic.

Some people call it risk control, others call it
diversification, and still others call it how to “wisely” invest your money.

However, the money management that is the key to top trading and
investing simply refers to the algorithm that tells you “how much” with
respect to any particular position in the market.

Rapidshare.

What is your trading system?

What is the trading you use currently?
What kind of set up and indicators do you apply in to your chart?

Fibo?
Candlestick/line pattern?
MACD,RSI,Stocastic,cross EMA,Bunny girls?

What ever the indicators you use,as long as you are comfortable,you can use it.
Does not need to be a fancy and complicated look.

Simplicity is better.

For me I like to have 'clear' chart!
When I really want to open a position then only I deploy some indicators,to catch the trend and to give me green signal for entering the trade....

Trend follower?Yes I am.
Remember "trend is your friend"...

I am also believe,that actually NO ONE is able to controlling the market movement.
It move ON ITS direction,like the water flow,wherever it flows....

There is a psychology I believe,behind those tick up and tick down.
The Price has it ACTION,and you and I can see it and react accordingly to the price action....


Happy trading fellow traders!
Hope that above simple words make your day different.

Jan 22, 2008

Crazy Chart today 22-01-08



As seen on chart above,the GBP/JPY have a highest spike of 219.15 and lowest spike on 204.72 and that is 443 pips in one single day!

On CNN news Dow Jones as well as many stock market (japan and India)has plunged to lowest level,it said the lowest level as the level of stock market after 911 tragedy.

Is it the 'panic' session of traders of the US reccesion that would come true?

From forexstreet news:

WASHINGTON (Thomson Financial) - The Federal Reserve cut its target Fed funds rate by 0.75 pct to 3.50 pct, "in view of a weakening of the economic outlook and increasing downside risks to growth."

The Fed also cut its discount rate for direct loans to banks by 0.75 pct to 4.00 pct.

Even with these rate cuts, the Fed statement said, "appreciable downside risks to growth remain", and it will "act in a timely manner as needed to address those risks."

Nomura Securities economist David Resler said he was "surprised that they didn't wait to see what the US market was going to do" although he had already "come to the belief that they had to do more than 0.50 pct."

In its statement, the Fed said that "while strains in short-term funding markets have eased somewhat, broader financial market conditions have continued to deteriorate and credit has tightened further for some businesses and households."

The Federal Open Market Committee also said it saw a "deepening of the housing contraction as well as some softening in labor markets."

St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President William Poole dissented from the inter-meeting rate cut, because he "did not believe that current conditions justified policy action before the regularly scheduled meeting next week."

Resler said he might have voted with Poole as "it does look a bit like panicking."

The Fed's monetary policy has now gotten ahead of fiscal policy in the sense of moving before the passage of any economic stimulus package.

President George W. Bush and Congressional leaders are scheduled to discuss the package later today.

Real Option In Practice




An option represents freedom of choice, after the revelation of information. An
option is the act of choosing, the power of choice, or the freedom of alternatives.
The word comes from the medieval French and is derived from the
Latin optio, optare, meaning to choose, to wish, to desire.


An option is a right, but not an obligation, for example, to follow through on a business
decision. In the financial markets, it is the freedom of choice after revelation
of additional information that increases or decreases the value of the asset on
which the option owner holds the option. A financial call option gives the
owner the right, but not the obligation, to purchase the underlying stock in
the future for a price fixed today. A put option gives the owner the right, but
not the obligation, to sell the stock in the future for a price fixed today.


A “real” option is an option “relating to things,” from the Late Latin
word realis. Real refers to fixed, permanent, or immovable things, as opposed
to illusory things. Strategic investment and budget decisions within
any given firm are decisions to acquire, exercise, abandon or let expire real
options. Managerial decisions create call and put options on real assets that
give management the right, but not the obligation, to utilize those assets to
achieve strategic goals and ultimately maximize the value of the firm.

Rapidshare

The Option Doctors:Option strategies for everykind of market





The first thing you need to know is how to understand the market. There
are different approaches to this; mine is a marriage between technical
analysis and fundamental analysis. As a technical analyst, I rely heavily on
my charts and figures. It is also important that the companies you are
looking at make economic sense (for the bulls) or are really full of hot air
(for the bears).
Thus, you must look at the fundamentals of a company. I
like companies that make money, pay dividends, and have insider ownership
with good growth and a price-earnings (P/E) ratio that is relatively
low. Those are my rules and I rarely stray far from them. There will be a
lot of companies that qualify, and that is where technical analysis comes
into the picture. Why opt for an issue that has a bad chart pattern? This
analysis technique allows you to see visually where the company is and
where it might be going.

In the first part of this book I show you how to use some tools to aid
you in your research. As a commodities trader, charts tell you everything
you need to know about a commodity. Most commodities traders are
closet chartists, anyway.
Commodities tend to chart really well.
The remainder of this book teaches you some basics about options
and about hedging, and invites you to use your newfound knowledge in up
markets, down markets, trending markets, trading range markets, losing
positions, and winning positions. Hopefully, your imagination will be fed
enough for you to think about things not mentioned in this book.


Rapidshare

Jan 21, 2008

Trading books 40-45

Trading books 040
Perry Kaufman - Smarter Trading.pdf
Perry Kaufman - Trading Systems & Methods.pdf
Pristine's Cardinal Rules Of Trading.pdf

Trading books 041
P Dorsey, J Mansueto - The Five Rules For Successful Stock Investing.pdf

Trading books 042
Probability And Statistics Textbook.pdf

Trading books 043
Protecting Your Wealth In Good Times And Bad.pdf
R G Hagstrom - The Warren Buffett Way 2nd Edition.pdf
R Imperiale - The Micro Cap Investor - Strategies For Making Big Returns In
Small Companies.pdf
R Nowakowski - Games Of No Chance.djvu
Real Options In Practice.pdf
Resource Stocks In Portfolio.pdf
Richard D Wyckoff - The Day Trader's Bible - Or My Secret In Day Trading Of
Stocks.pdf
Richard Smitten - Trade Like Jesse Livermore (2005).pdf
Rob Booker - Fairygod Trader.pdf
Robert Fisher - Fibonacci Applications And Strategies For Traders.pdf
Robert J , Elliott P And Ekkehard Kopp, «mathematics Of Financial Markets»
(Springer Finance).pdf
Robert M Nideffer - Calming The Mind.pdf

Trading books 044
Robert Slater - Soros Unauthorized Biography.pdf
Rudolf Wittmer - Can Technical Analysis Still Beat Random Systems.pdf
Ryan Jones - Money Management.pdf
S A Mccrary - Hedge Fund Course.pdf
S and C.pdf
Sarin And Saudagaran-Testing For Micro-Structure Effects Of International
Dual Listings Using Intraday Data.pdf
Secrets Of The Millionaire Traders Vol I.pdf
Secrets Of The Millionaire Traders Vol Ii.pdf
Sfo Raschke 0803.pdf
Sheldon Natenberg, «option Volatility & Pricing - Advanced Trading
Strategies And Techniques».djvu

Trading books 045
Simple Technical Trading Rules And The Stochastic Properties.pdf
Speculative Investor Behavior In A Stock Market.pdf
Stephen W Bigalow - Big Profit Patterns Using Candlestick.pdf
Steve Mitchell - Shortcuts & Secrets To Winning The Stockmarket Game.pdf
Steve Mitchell - Stock market game.pdf
Stevie Nison - Japanese Candlestick Charting Techniques.pdf
Stochastic Modeling In Economics And Finance.djvu
Strategic Analysis And Trading Tactics.pdf
Street Smarts (Laurence Connors).pdf
Streetsmart Guide To Valuing A Stock.pdf
Technical Stock Analysis - Bollinger Bands And Rsi.pdf

h-ttp://rapidshare.com/files/55902839/Stock_books_040.rar
h-ttp://rapidshare.com/files/55902165/Stock_books_041.rar
h-ttp://rapidshare.com/files/55902906/Stock_books_042.rar
h-ttp://rapidshare.com/files/55902804/Stock_books_044.rar
h-ttp://rapidshare.com/files/55902988/Stock_books_045.rar

Warrior Trading: Inside the Mind of an Elite Currency Trader (Wiley Trading)




Among the thousands—perhaps millions—of traders in the
world today, there is an elite group who amasses immense fortunes.
It is these individuals, and the stories of their wealth and
the kinds of lifestyles they enjoy, who inspire millions around
the globe to partake in the greatest game on earth: trading in
financial markets. These individuals, through focused effort, a
constant search for knowledge, immense courage, and concentrated
determination, win out over the throngs of lesser traders.
They are the warrior traders.

After more than 20 years of trading
in global financial markets, and chatting and discussing markets
with the best warrior traders from New York to Switzerland,
I feel privileged to have learned a great deal. I feel even more
privileged to now have the opportunity to put down in these
pages some of the trading secrets I have discovered.


I say “secrets,” but this does not mean the concepts are difficult.
Perhaps like the most valuable gifts in life, they are really
self-apparent. Yet despite this, they are somehow unseen by the
majority. Even those who have discovered some of these secrets
usually end up drifting back to their previous, unsuccessful
trading styles. In fact, even the best of the warrior traders have
to constantly guard themselves against the tendency toward
complacency and even arrogance when profits have been growing
particularly well for a period. My hope is that the information
in these pages will quickly accelerate traders from beginner to warrior status;
however, it is important to realize at the outset
that this can happen only if warrior status is truly desired.
Once arrived at, the new challenge is staying there.
The most important warrior secret of all:
Your level of success in the world of
financial markets is entirely up to you
and has nothing to do with what the markets
are doing. There will always be bull
markets and bear markets. The occurrence
of good or bad luck, if luck exists at
all, evens out over time.

Great success
and the attaining of warrior trader status
come about as a result of commitment, a
never-ending willingness to learn, steadfast
determination, and that rare ingredient, a touch of humility.
Throughout the ages, all great warriors have had these same
characteristics.

Rapidshare

Jan 20, 2008

A Beginner's Guide to Short-Term Trading: How to Maximize Profits in 3 Days to 3 Weeks




A Beginner's Guide to Short-Term Trading: How to Maximize Profits in 3 Days to 3 Weeks.

SHORT-TERM TRADING: THE GOOD NEWS Maybe you're a professional in your field, an entrepreneur, a retiree, a student, or a homemaker. You've probably observed the stock market and realized tidy profits can be made from the market's current volatility. Whether you plan to trade on a full-time or part-time basis, the benefits of trading are fantastic.

If you make trading your full-time occupation, you can choose when, where, and if you choose to work. You can trade from any location, as long as your comp~ ter is hooked up to the Internet. Office politi~s? There are none. A persnickety boss? You're the boss! Want to wear your bunny slippers to work? Do it! Catch the flu? Pull the covers over your head and stay in bed for as long as you want.
Got the time and money to take a week off? Have fun!
If you'd rather trade
part-time, harmonize it with your regular job and add
"luxury" money to your wallet. When you learn how to trade cautiously and wisely, your earnings may transform dreams into real rewards, such as the sailboat you always wanted, the vacation cottage in the mountains, or a college education for your children.

Here's a benefit some folks don't think of: When executed properly, short term trading can have lower risk than long-term investing. Many traditional buy-and-holders ride out bear markets fully invested, gritting their teeth while they watch their capital shrivel in value. Now you will know when to go "flat," or close all of your positions. You'll calmly put your holdings in cash during corrections and/or bear markets. And, you'll have lots of money to shop with, when the bulls once again take control.

THE FLIP SIDE

The stock market is the most challenging arena on earth. It takes no prisoners. It's a dog-eat-dog world, and only the fittest survive. Those who jump in without adequate knowledge or discipline usually get their heads handed to them in a hurry! To compete in this field, you have to be willing to persist and study hard. You have to cultivate the nerves of a bomb-detonator and develop the discipline of a marine corps drill sergeant. Short-term trading is riskier than socking your money into fixed income returns, such as Treasury bonds or money market funds. And the truth is, you will-especially at the beginning of the learning curve-experience losses. (The size of the losses are within your control.) Are you highly risk-averse? Does the thought of losing money send you running for the Maalox bottle? If so, you may want to choose a different investing avenue.

Collect it.



Welcome to Trading Triggers. If you are an active trader or a first time
investor looking for a trading method that suits your personality,
then you have the right book. Trading for a living is an
amazing and yet risky business. There is more to trading than buying and
selling. There are often-missed but important issues that many books do
not mention, such as not only how to make money in the market but also
how to keep it and create a positive cash flow. The purpose of this book is
to take you to a new level of trading knowledge by giving detailed explanations
of technical tools that will help you develop your own trading system
so you can cultivate and extract money from the market, especially those
traders who want high alpha (big returns) with reasonable standard deviation
(volatility). I will explain some of the most obvious yet simple concepts
of how to interpret technical analysis and improve your chart-reading skills
so you can make money in the markets.

There are two theories on how markets perform: efficient market theory
and random walk theory.

1. Efficient market theory lends to the belief that markets are always
priced correctly because the current price reflects all factual information.
If the markets are efficient, then no fundamental information will
give an investor an edge in the market.

2. Random walk theory lends to the belief that price movements do not
follow any pattern or trend and that past price behavior cannot be used
to predict future price movements. In other words, the markets are
completely unpredictable.
I fall in the category of believing that history can and does repeat itself.
People can and do make money based on technical analysis, and I am here
to help prove it.

Rapidshare.

Jan 19, 2008

The Essentials of Trading : From the Basics to Building a Winning Strategy


The Essentials of Trading : From the Basics to Building a Winning Strategy (Wiley Trading)

As a psychologist who has worked with many professional and casual
traders, I have received numerous requests for reading material appropriate
for those just beginning their journey through the trading
world. With the publication of The Essentials of Trading: From the Basics
to Building a Winning Strategy, John Forman has addressed this need
most admirably. Intrepid souls considering the pursuit of the markets as a
vocation or avocation will find in these pages a lucid, engaging, real-world
account of what trading is all about.

John is the Content Editor for the popular Trade2Win web site, an online
community of traders. His familiarity with trading and traders, born of
this and his own direct market experience, is evident in his text. As an author
myself, I know how difficult it can be to write an introductory work
that avoids the twin perils of talking down to readers versus writing over
their heads. John navigates this path effectively, taking readers first
through the basics of placing trades and understanding how markets work
and then progressing to the development of trading plans, the implementation
of risk management, and the building of trading systems. His incorporation
of exercises and use of examples brings topics to life, maintaining
the interest of even the most hyperactive traders.

Link.

Trading for a Living: Psychology, Trading Tactics, Money Management


Trading for a Living: Psychology,Trading Tactics,Money Management.
By Dr.Alexander Elder.



Rapidshare

Jan 18, 2008

Three Pervasive Myths in the Trading World

Three Pervasive Myths in the Trading World

By Brett N. Steenbarger, Ph.D.


"My work as a trading psychologist has provided me with a fascinating window on the factors that separate successful from unsuccessful traders across a variety of settings, from proprietary firms to investment banks to hedge funds. Having met and worked personally with well over 100 professional traders in the past few years, the main conclusion I’ve come to is that most of the generalizations about trading success are simply not true. In this article, I thought I’d summarize three of the more pervasive myths about trading success out there and offer my own, different perspectives.

Myth #1: Emotions are at the root of trading problems. Yes, emotions can interfere with concentration and performance, but that doesn’t mean that they are a primary cause. Indeed, emotional distress is as often the result of poor trading as the cause. When traders fail to manage risk properly, trading size that is too large for their accounts, they invite outsized emotional responses to their swings in P/L. Similarly, when traders trade untested patterns that possess no objective edge in the marketplace, they are going to lose money over time and experience an understandable degree of emotional frustration. I know many successful traders who are fiercely competitive and highly emotional. I also know many successful traders who are highly analytical and not at all emotional. Trading is a performance field, no less than athletics or the performing arts. Success is a function of talents (inborn abilities) and skills (acquired competencies). No amount of emotional self-control can turn a person into a successful musician, football player, or trader. Once individuals possess the requisite talents and skills for success, however, then psychological factors become important. Psychology dictates how consistent you are with the skills and talents you have; it cannot replace those skills and talents.

Myth #2: Anyone, with dedicated effort, can get to the point of trading for a living. That is nonsense. How many people make their living from acting or musical performance? What proportion of people playing sports can actually make their livelihood from athletics? Many people play chess or poker, but how many can sustain a living from it? Quite simply, to make a living from any performance activity means that you are consistently good at what you do. Not everyone has the talent, skill, or drive to be that successful—in any field. Across the many traders I’ve met in various settings, from home-based, independent traders to professional ones in firms, the best predictors of trading success have been the size of the trader’s accounts and the resources available to the trader. If a person were to make 25% per year on their accounts year after year, they would be among the world’s most successful money managers. Most money managers of mutual funds, hedge funds, and pension funds cannot sustain such performance. If, however, a trader begins with $50,000 of capital, he or she may not be content with $12,500 of profit. This leads the trader to accept huge leverage and court a risk of ruin when an inevitable string of losing trades occurs. Indeed, such excess leverage is a main cause of emotional distress in trading. Take a look at how the Turtles made their money: they learned a trading method, learned to be consistent with that method, and were given enough money by Richard Dennis that they could trade multiple markets with enough size to scale into positions in each. Even with those resources, not all of the Turtle students could succeed. Talent, skill, and opportunity are the ingredients of success, and these are relatively normally distributed in the trading population, just as they are relatively normally distributed in the population at large.

Myth #3: The main cause of trading failure is a loss of discipline. This is a myth perpetuated by “trading coach” and “guru” types that: a) don’t trade themselves and b) have a vested interest in your belief that their services are all that stand between you and success. The main cause of trading failure is a lack of an objective edge in the marketplace, trading random patterns that have never been tested out for success. We would never consider buying a car simply by looking at it. We’d want to research it, test-drive it, and peer under the hood. Amazingly, however, many traders will risk far more money trading patterns that they never research or test-drive. Many times, the reason they stray from those methods is that, intuitively, they realize that those methods are not working. In any performance field, we find a hard-and-fast truth: the great performers spend more time practicing their performances than actually performing. That is just as true for the Broadway actress as for the Olympic athlete. Many traders, however, think that on-the-job training will be enough. Unfortunately, their accounts often don’t survive their learning curves. A well-placed executive within a trading firm confided to me last year that the average time it takes the average trader to blow through their entire account is seven months. That is why brokerage firms are always on the hunt for new customers. It’s not that these traders are all deficient in discipline: they simply haven’t engaged in sufficient practice to figure out the right markets and trading styles for them and to hone their skills. In every other performance field, you can find relatively easy levels of competition: you can join a community theater, play rounds of golf at the par-3 course, or set the challenge level on your chess computer. There is no easy level of competition in trading, however. When you place a trade on a major exchange, you are up against the pros from day one. No wonder it is so difficult to succeed! Discipline is necessary for trading success, but there is much more to success than discipline. It takes concerted practice and the cultivation of skills at reading and acting upon market patterns.

In an ideal world, I wouldn’t have to challenge these myths. You’d be able to obtain very realistic messages about trading success from brokerage firms, vendors, trading gurus, books, and magazines. The reality, however, is that most of these commercial entities have a vested interest in perpetuating a dream that is, in reality, a cruel fantasy: that, without real, sustained effort, anyone can make it big as a trader.

Does that make me a Scrooge during this holiday season, saying “Bah, humbug!” to the aspirations of thousands of traders? I think not. The reason I wrote my most recent book, Enhancing Trader Performance, was to show that there is a common process beneath the development of elite performance in any field. That process involves several components:

* Finding a Niche – Identifying a performance field that takes maximum advantage of your skills, talents, and interests;
* Deliberative Practice – Rehearsing skills in increasingly realistic settings to prepare for the challenges of actual performance;
* Constant Feedback – Intensive review of performance to identify strengths and weaknesses, so that you can capitalize on the former and address the latter.

The successful traders I’ve known have found a market (or set of markets) and a trading style that capitalizes on their abilities. They have been relentless in working on their skills, using videotaping to review markets and performance and using simulators to rehearse under different market conditions. To sustain such effort requires a love of the markets themselves, something not all traders have. Some traders love the action, some love the dream of making money, some love the opportunity to work for themselves—but many don’t love the work itself: the effort of mastering patterns in demand and supply.

Success is possible in trading as it is in any performance field. If anyone tells you, however, that the path to trading success is different than it is for the surgeon or Olympian, you know that you’re hearing a myth. If you choose the path of the elite performer, trading can be wonderfully challenging and rewarding. If trading is not your ideal path for self-development, however, you are far better off finding your passion elsewhere and managing your money prudently. The goal is to develop the best within you, whether that is as a trader or as something else. Your life deserves nothing less."

* Taken from some source in the net.

Jan 17, 2008

Double in 3days

Pair GBP:JPY ever since have been my favorite pair in trading.
I love to see the volatility of the pair.Its so interesting to see the chart plunging 100-200 pips in all direction in the single day.

I know from some senior traders,this pair is very dangerous,in term of financial loss causing by its volatilty.You really need a big capital to hold the price that against your position up to 100-150 pips before its reverse to your favor.

But still,I love this pair.I see the real chart and the 'real forex' in this pair.

My 3days 'playing' with this pair also giving a wonderfull result as you can see below :)
I just use simple 'basic' indicator(RSI,MACD,EMA) and fibonacci retracement.
The chart usually I will check first in 4h,then 1h as well as 30' and15' to get the right entry.
'Follow the water flow and ready for reversal' is a good phylosophy in this case...

Remember:
It is only DEMO.
The actual result in live trading could be different story....

Happy trading.

Options Trading: The Hidden Reality






Dear Fellow Trader / Investor / Hedger,
I wrote this book so that you will come to understand that options are
either for you or they are not. For those beginners who understand basic
options material, this is a good starting point. For those readers who are
having problems trading options, this book will help you to determine
where the problems lie, and whether you may be successful with options,
or whether you should stay away from them.

My mom, dad and most of my relatives don’t trade options because
options are not for them. I have a cousin who trades options. He came
to work for me when he left college. I am going to teach you the same
way that I taught him. By learning how to avoid the pot holes and
surviving long enough to put together a personal game plan, he has gone
on to be one of the most exceptional options traders that the industry has
ever known. Experience in the markets will teach you more than I will,
just as it taught my cousin and thousands of other people who I have
shared this content with over the last 25 years. It starts here and it can
end here too, without losing a nickel because you will be able to answer
the question, “Are options for me?”

Hosted in Rapidshare

Jan 16, 2008

The DayTrade Forex System





This is a good book for beginner.
As its title this book explain on how to get $50-500 per day in the day trading using simple technical analysis.It also cover on how to set up Metatrader,also explaining how to start trading using simple methode and few indicators in forex.
The methode used in this book including trading on 'break out','trading following the trend' and 'trading top and bottom'.

Very good book for beginner!

Hosting on Rapidshare.

Jan 15, 2008

Trading for a living(CD Audio)




CD Audio by the author of Trading for a living:Dr.Alexander Elder.
CD1.
CD2.
CD3.

How to use Fibonacci

Step by step on how to deploy and use Fibonacci Retractment

The Psychology of Foreign Exchange Market.




If you are interested in how psychology influences the foreign exchange
market, this is the book for you. This book sheds light on spectacular market
phenomena as well as on subliminal psychological processes in trading decisions.
New insights are gathered from psychological theory, survey research studies
with leading foreign exchange participants, and finally one-on-one interviews
with trading experts. Combining these insights, the book offers an innovative
psychological understanding of the daily decisions that determine exchange rates.
The following statements from foreign exchange experts provide a first
glimpse at the variety of topics explored.

1. Personality characteristics involved in successful trading—the trading
manager of a leading bank declares:
‘‘I think you could be a good trader based on trading and experience,
but you can’t be excellent. There is something that is inherent in the
very best traders that other people just don’t have.’’

2. Asymmetric risk-taking after gains and after losses may lead traders to
take excessive risk to make up for previous losses. As one trader
explains the case of Nick Leeson, whose trading losses brought down
an entire bank:
‘‘He was just emotionally attached to his position; he just couldn’t
ever believe that he was going to be wrong.’’

3. Meta-expectations (i.e., market participants’ expectations about the
expectations of other market participants):
‘‘That is what I call market psychology: understanding what people
are thinking, why they are thinking it, or what stage of the game they
are at.’’


4. Trading intuition: Explaining a recent trading decision, one experienced
trader remarks:
‘‘People asked me, ‘Why did you do that?’ I said, ‘I don’t know.’ And
that’s the truth, I don’t know. For instance, I walked in last Monday,
and I was just wandering around. And then I just got this light
shining on me, and I said ‘[the pound] sterling is going a lot lower
today!’ There is no economics; there is no chart; there is no anything,
except for ‘Well, I think.’ And I sold quite a lot of it, and it
collapsed, and I made a hell of a lot of money. And I could not
explain why I had done it.’’

5. Market rumors:
‘‘Rumors are in the markets all the time and markets move!’’

6. Market metaphors translate the abstraction of the market into psychological
reality. In the words of one trader:
‘‘I think it is a battlefield—like boxing every day. I compete and
struggle with the markets. They are very tough, always, and they test
me. I need to always be ready to fight.’’
As another trader explains, these metaphors have important consequences
for trading decisions:
‘‘If you don’t like a certain counterparty, for example, you end up
like you try to fight against him, with sometimes taking silly positions
which under normal circumstances you would not. And this normally
causes a lot of losses!’’

Download and read more.

Trading book 36-39

Trading books 036

Mcgraw Hill Understanding Stocks.pdf
Mcgraw-Hill - Brealey & Myers - Finance - Investment Valuation, 2nd
Edition.pdf
Mcgraw-Hill, Buy The Rumor, Sell The Fact - 85 Maxims Of Wall Street And
What They Really Mean [2004 Isbn0071427953].pdf
Mcgraw-Hill, Investments, 5th Edition - Vol I [2001 Isbn0072503661].pdf
Mcgraw-Hill, Investments, 5th Edition - Vol Ii [2001 Isbn0072503661].pdf
Mcgraw-Hill, The Triumph Of Contrarian Investing - Crowds, Manias, And
Beating The Market By Going Against The Grain [2004 Isbn007143240x].pdf
Mcmillan And Speight-Nonlinear Dynamics In High Frequency Intra-Day
Financial Data.pdf
Mechanical Trading Systems.pdf
Micheal Mcdonald - Predict Market Swings With Technical Analysis.pdf
Mike Sincere - Understanding Stocksreduced.pdf
Money Management Risk Control For Traders.pdf
Moriarty Sfsg.pdf
Morris And Song Shin-Liquidity Black Holes.pdf

Trading books 037

Michael Covel - Trend Following.pdf

Trading books 038

Murphy - Tech Analysis Of The Financial Markets.pdf
N Tengler - New Era Value Investing - A Disciplined Approach To Buying Value
And Growth Stocks.pdf
Neural Prediction Of Weekly Stock Market Index(1).pdf
New Trading Dimensions - How To Profit From Chaos In Stocks, Bonds, And
Commodities - Bill Williams.pdf

Trading books 039

O'reilly - Online Investing Hacks.chm
Oliver Velez - Swing Trading Tactics.pdf
Online Trading Academy - Electronic Trading Guide For Nasdaq L2(9908).pdf
Other Trading Books.htm
Pagano And Schwartz-A Closing Call's Impact On Market Quality At Euronext
Paris.pdf
Parlour And Seppi-Liquidity-Based Competition For Order Flow.pdf
Patterns In Three Centuries Of Stock Market Prices.pdf
Paul Levine - The Midas Method Of Technical Analysis.pdf
Pedro V Marcal - Market Timing And Technical Analysis.chm
Performance Asx Resources.pdf
Persaud-Liquidity Black Holes.pdf
Pis Fsg.pdf
Place Of Insurance.pdf
Plan Process.pdf
Portfolio Risk Reduction.pdf
Pring, Martin J - Technical Analysis For Short-Term Traders.pdf

ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902182/Stock_books_036.rar
ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902845/Stock_books_037.rar
ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902025/Stock_books_038.rar
ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902903/Stock_books_039.rar

Jan 14, 2008

Mental Fitness for traders.




In this compelling report, Norman Hallett has exposed the missing link to true trading
success; that is, training the mind to a level of mental fitness (and toughness) to the point
where the trader is able to keep his emotional tendencies in check while trading. This is
no small task, but it can and is being done by all successful traders. In fact, it is virtually
impossible to be a successful trader without it. Why then do most traders (losing traders)
only pay lip service, if that, to this important subject?

Read more about this book,but download it first here!

Trading in the zone




Mark Douglas, in Trading in the Zone, has written a book that is the
accumulation of years of thought and research—the work of a lifetime—and for those of us who view
trading as a profession, he has produced a gem.
Trading in the Zone is an in-depth look at the challenges that we face when we take up the challenge of
trading. To the novice, the only challenge appears to be to find a way to make money. Once the novice
learns that tips, brokers' advice, and other ways to justify buying or selling do not work consistently, he
discovers that he either needs to develop a reliable trading strategy or purchase one. After that, trading
should be easy, right? All you have to do is follow the rules, and the money will fall into your lap.
At this point, if not before, novices discover that trading can turn into one of the most frustrating
experiences they will ever face.
This experience leads to the oft-started statistic that 95 percent of futures traders lose all of their money
within the first year of trading. Stock traders generally experience the same results, which is why
pundits always point to the fact that most stock traders fail to outperform a simple buy and hold
investment scenario.
So, why do people, the majority of whom are extremely successful in other occupations, fail so
miserably as traders? Are successful traders born and not made? Mark Douglas says no. What's
necessary, he says, is that the individual acquire the trader's mindset. It sounds easy, but the fact is, this
mindset is very foreign when compared with the way our life experiences teach us to think about the
world.

This is very important book for the beginner traders,a must book for every one that entering the trading arena.

Here the link if you want to buy.
For the Rapidshare lover you can grab it here.

Trading books 26-30

Trading books 026


Joe Ross - Trading Futures By The Book.pdf

Trading books 027

John Bollinger - Bollinger On Bollinger Band.pdf
John Grisham - The Broker.pdf
John Hayden - How To Use The Rsi.pdf
John J Murphy - Charting Made Easy.pdf
John J Murphy - Intermarket Technical Analysis - Trading Strategies For The
Global Stock, Bond, Commodity, And Currency Markets.pdf

Trading books 028

Joe Ross - Trading The Ross Hook.pdf

Trading books 029

John J Murphy - Intermarket Technical Analysis - Trading Strategies.pdf
John J Murphy - Technical Analysis Of The Financial Markets.pdf

Trading books 030
John L Person - Swing Trading Using Candlestick Charting With Pivot
Point.pdf
John Piper - The Way To Trade.pdf
John Wiley & Sons, Getting Started In Bonds, 2nd Edition [2003
Isbn0471271233].pdf
John Wiley & Sons, The Vital Few Vs The Trivial Many - Invest With The
Insiders, Not The Masses, Revised Edition [2005 Isbn0471681954].pdf
John Wiley Sons - Valuation - Maximizing Corporate Value.pdf
John Wiley Sons Stock Trader Almanac 2005 38th Ed.pdf
Jorda And Marcellino-Modeling High-Frequency Fx Data Dynamics.pdf
Just One Thing Twelve Of The World's Best Investors Reveal The One Strategy
You Can't Overlook.pdf
K R Murphy, B Myors - Statistical Power Analysis.pdf

ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902905/Stock_books_026.rar
ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902837/Stock_books_027.rar
ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902901/Stock_books_028.rar
ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902816/Stock_books_029.rar
ht-tp://rapidshare.com/files/55902812/Stock_books_030.rar

Jan 12, 2008

Trading books 21 to 25

Trading books 021
Ito And Hashimoto-High-Frequency Contagion Of Currency Crises In Asia.pdf
J K Lasser - Pick Stocks Like Warren Buffett.pdf
J R Hedges Iv - Hedges On Hedge Funds - How To Successfully Analyze And Select An Investment.pdf
Jack Schwager - Guide To Winning With Automated Trading Systems (Course Manual).pdf
Jack Schwager - Stock Market Wizards.pdf
Jack Schwager - The New Market Wizards.pdf
Jake Bernstein - Dearborn Trade Publishing - No Bull Investing.pdf
Jake Bernstein - How To Trade The New Single Stock Futures.pdf

Trading books 022
Investment Valuation - Damodaran.pdf
Investment Vehicles.pdf
J R Hill G Pruitt And L Hill - The Ultimate Trading Guide.pdf

Trading books 023
Jake Bernstein - Market Masters.pdf
Jake Bernstein - Stock Market Strategies That Work.pdf

Trading books 024
Jake Bernstein - The Compleat Day Trader Vol I.pdf
Jake Bernstein - The Compleat Day Trader Vol Ii.pdf
Jake Bernstein - Trade Your Way To Riches.pdf

Trading books 025
Jan L Arps - Surfing The Market Waves - The Swing Trader’s.pdf
Jay Kaeppel - The Four Biggest Mistakes In Futures Trading.pdf
Jeff Cooper - Intra-Day Trading Strategies, Proven Steps.pdf
Jeff Cooper - The 5 Day Momentum Method.pdf
Jens Clever - Master Trader.pdf
Jesse Livermore - Reminiscences Of A Stock Operator.pdf
Joe Ross - How To Spot A Trend.pdf
Joe Ross - Trading Spreads And Seasonals.pdf
John Allen Paulos - Mathematician Plays The Stock Market.pdf


hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902013/Stock_books_021.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902398/Stock_books_022.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55901983/Stock_books_023.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902856/Stock_books_024.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902009/Stock_books_025.rar

Trading books 15-20

Trading books 015
Gann, W D - Unpublished Stock Market Forecasting Courses.pdf




Trading books 016
George Angell - Sniper Trading Workbook.pdf
George Fontanills - The Options Course - High Profit Low Stress Trading Methods.pdf
Goodhart And O’hara-High Frequency Data In Financial Markets Issues And Applications.pdf
Griffiths, Turnbullb And White-Re-Examining The Small-Cap Myth Problems In Portfolio Formation And Liquidation.pdf
Guide To Effective Daytrading-Wizetrade.pdf
Hamao And Hasbrouck-Securities Trading In The Absence Of Dealers - Trades, And Quotes On The Tokyo Stock Exchange.pdf
Handbook For Investment Committee Members How To Make Prudent Investments For Your Organization Wiley Finance Series Ebook-Yyepg.pdf
Harris, Sofianos And Shapiro-Program Trading And Intraday Volatility.pdf
Harry D Schultz - Bear Market Investing Strategies.pdf
Hartmann, Manna And Manzanares-The Microstructure Of The Euro Money Market.pdf
Hedges On Hedge Funds How To Successfully Analyze (2005).pdf
Hollifield, Miller, Sandas And Slive-Liquidity Supply And Demand In Limit Order Markets.pdf



Trading books 017

Gerald Appel - Technical Analysis.pdf



Trading books 018
Greg Morris - Candlestick Charting Explained.pdf



Trading books 019
Houweling, Mentink And Vorst-How To Measure Corporate Bond Liquidity.pdf
How I Made 2 Million In The Stock Market.pdf
How i trade living.pdf
How Large Is Liquidity Risk In An Automated.pdf
How The Stock Market Works.pdf
How To Make Money Shorting Stocks In Up And Down Markets.pdf
How to read charts.pdf
Hrishikesh D Vinod - Preparing For The Worst.pdf
Huang And Stoll-The Components Of The Bid-Ask Spread - A General Approach.pdf
Hw Brands - Masters Of Enterprise.pdf




Trading books 020
Individual Investor´s Guide To Investment.pdf
Inside The Guru Mind Warren Buffet [R Heller].pdf
Insurances Strategies.pdf
Inter’l Vs Aust Shares.pdf
Investment Performance And Investor Behavior.pdf
Investment Psychology Explained Classic Strategies To Beat The Markets - Wiley.pdf
Investment science.pdf
Investment Strategies.pdf


hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902004/Stock_books_016.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902097/Stock_books_017.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902197/Stock_books_018.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/55902064/Stock_books_019.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902018/Stock_books_020.rar

Trading books 12,13 and 14

Trading books 12
Dow.pdf
Economics - How The Stock Market Works.pdf
Eday - Trading In Mind.pdf
Elder Alexander - Come Into My Trading Room - A Complete Guide To Trading.pdf
Elder Alexander - Trading For A Living.pdf
Electronic Trading Systems In Europe And Development Potentialities For Russia.pdf
Eleswarapu And Venkataraman-The Impact Of Legal And Political Institutions On Equity Trading Costs A Cross-Country Analysis.pdf
Eleswarapu, Thompson And Venkataraman-The Impact Of Regulation Fair Disclosure Trading Costs And Information Asymmetry.pdf
Emotion Free Trading Book.pdf
Encyclopedia Of Chart Patterns, 2nd Edition [2005 Isbn0471668265].pdf



Trading books 013
Encyclopedia Of Trading Strategies.pdf
Engle And Lange-Predicting Vnet - A Model Of The Dynamics Of Market Depth.pdf
Engle-The Econometric Of High-Frequency Data.pdf
Exchange Rules For The Frankfurt Stock Exchange.pdf
Expected And Unexpected Cost Of Trading In The Xetra.pdf
F E James Jr - Monthly Moving Averages An Effective Investment Tool .pdf
Fernando-Commonality In Liquidity-Transmission Of Liquidity Shocks Across Investors And Securities.pdf
Fishea And Robeb-The Impact Of Illegal Insider Trading In Dealer And Specialist Markets - Evidence From A Natural Experiment.pdf
For Dummies Investing Online For Dummies 5th Edition.pdf
Foucault And Kadan-Limit Order Book As A Market For Liquidity.pdf
Foucault And Lescourret-Information Sharing, Liquidity And Transaction Costs In Floor-Based Trading Systems.pdf
Foucault, Kadan And Kandel-Limit Order Book As A Market For Liquidity.pdf
Frino, Mcinish And Toner-The Liquidity Of Automated Exchanges - New Evidence From German Bund Futures.pdf
Futures Magazine - The Art Of Day-Trading.pdf
Gann - How To Trade.pdf



Trading books 014
Gann, W D - New Stock Trend Detector.pdf
Getting An Investing Game Plan - Creating It Working It Winning It (Wiley - 2003).pdf
Gg38 World Bank, Reshaping The Future (2005) Yyepg Lotb.pdf
Gillet And Lavoie-Krach, Bonnes Nouvelles Et R%c9actions %c0 Bruxelles, Toronto Et New York.pdf
Giot And Grammig-How Large Is Liquidity Risk In An Automated Auction Market.pdf


hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902347/Stock_books_012.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902039/Stock_books_013.rar
hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55902001/Stock_books_014.rar

Jan 11, 2008

The Complete Guide to Online Stock Market Investing

The Complete Guide to Online Stock Market Investing: The Definitive 20-Day Guide
Alexander Davidson | Kogan Page | Pages:234 | 2007-03-01 | ISBN:0749447478 | PDF




What is this book about.

In this small book, I will show you proven ways to make money from online
investing in the stock market, which you can then adapt for your own purposes.
You have in your hands a course which has worked well for many over the past
four years and which I encourage you to put to practical use.
To invest in shares online, if you get it right, is not just lucrative but is fun
as well. You can make profits when shares are down as well as when they are
up. In this book, you will find guidance for investing in all market conditions.
The course is ideal for beginners, and has much to offer the more experienced
investor.

Download Link.

Future and Option magazine December2007




Future and Option Magazine December 2007 edition.
Grab your copy while it is still hot!


Download link.

Jan 5, 2008

Getting Started in Currency Trading






About This Book

This book is intended to introduce the novice investor to the exciting, complex,
and sometimes profitable realm of trading world currencies on the foreign
exchange markets (FOREX). It also serves as a reference guide for stocks and
futures traders who wish to branch out into new securities opportunities. Our
primary focus is on the rapidly expanding and evolving online trading marketplace
for spot currencies.


From the very beginning we must emphasize that currency trading may
not be to everyone’s disposition. The neophyte investor must be keenly aware of
all the risks involved and should never trade on funds he or she deems necessary
for survival. If you have some experience with leveraged markets such as futures
or options, you owe yourself a look at FOREX. Those who have never traded
will find it the “purest” of all speculative adventures.


RapidShare

Price Action Video

We can learn the trading from the video as well.
A lot of resources out there.
This one below is one of my favorite....

101 option trading secrets




Option trading is one of the greatest games on earth! You
can be a two-dollar investor, betting on the action of stocks, the
markets, futures and/or commodities, or you can be the casino or
a legalized bookie, taking the bets instead of making the bets.
You pick the role and have the fun and profit. With options, gains
of over 1000% are not unusual, and you can design strategies
that will win up to 90% of the time.


Better yet, options are an excellent investment tool that
gives you much more flexibility, reduces your risks and increases
your income in the investment markets. Once properly learning
to use options, you will use this tool in your investment portfolio
for the rest of your life.


However, many novice option traders, as they start trading,
encounter many disappointments and issues in the options markets
and leave with a bitter taste, for they have unrealistic expectations
and are not equipped to compete in this game. This book
will help the novice option traders as well as the experienced option
traders become better equipped to stay in the game and
compete successfully.

Rapidshare

Math for Trade






This book is about math,calculation,algebra and so on that is necessarily important for the trader.

Don't get mad,just enjoy the reading.

RapidShare.

The Options Course.





Well-known options strategist and instructor George Fontanills has updated his time-tested and bestselling book, The Options Course. The new edition improves and expands upon the original to help you avoid some common and costly options mistakes. The systematic, step-by-step approach, covers everything from basic concepts to sophisticated techniques and is designed for investors at all levels of experience...


hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/60314917/0471668516.rar

The same book,first edition published 1998:

hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/83658363/options_course.rar.html

Jan 4, 2008

Trading books 011

Trading books 011
De Jong, Nijman And Roell-A Comparison Of The Cost Of Trading French Shares
On The Paris Bourse And On Seaq International.pdf
De Matos And Fernandes-Testing The Markov Property With Ultra-High Frequency
Financial Data.pdf
Dean Lebaron's Treasury Of Investment Wisdom 30 Great Investing Minds -
Wiley.pdf
Death.doc
Demarchi And Foucault-Equity Trading Systems In Europe - A Survey Of Recent
Changes.pdf
Dennis D Peterson - Developing A Trading System Combining Rsi & Bollinger
Bands.pdf
Deutsche Bank - Asset Valuation Allocation Models 2001.pdf
Deutsche Bank - Asset Valuation Allocation Models 2002.pdf
Deutsche Borse Group - From Trading Floor To Virtual Marketplace.pdf
Divorcing the Dow - Using Revolutionary Market Indicators to Profit From the
Stealth Boom Ahead.pdf
Donald Coxe - The New Reality Of Wall Street.pdf
Doug Henwood - Wall Street - How It Works & For Whom.pdf
Doug Henwood - Wall Street - How It Works.pdf

hXXp://rapidshare.com/files/55901995/Stock_books_011.rar

Jan 1, 2008

Very Happy New Year +Disclaimer




Happy New Year 2008.

May the 2008 will bring more health,wealth and prosperous year to come.


Please allow your little time to read the following disclaimer regarding my blog contents:


1.This site may include market analysis. All ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or implied herein, are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation to invest, trade, and/or speculate in the markets.
Any investments, trades, and/or speculations made in light of the ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or implied herein, are committed at your own risk, financial or otherwise.


2.Distribution
This site is not intended for distribution, or use by, any person in any country where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation. It is the responsibility of visitors to this website to ascertain the terms of and comply with any local law or regulation to which they are subject.

Thank you.