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2nd or 3rd edition, Lionel?
I found his 3rd ed. [trading systems and methods, '98] much better with far
fewer typos.
Bob
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> [mailto:owner-metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Lionel Issen
> Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2000 10:29 AM
> To: metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: M. Prings discounted MetaStock's CDs.
>
>
> Joe:
> I agree with most of what you wrote. One exception, Granville's New Key to
> Stock Market Profits was overlong and overpriced. His first book is still
> worth reading.
>
> Perry Kaufman's book (both editions) is indeed a bit demanding
> and in places
> his explanations are not quite complete enough for me.
> Lionel Issen
> lissen@xxxxxxxxx
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: <Arsk0jn@xxxxxxx>
> To: <metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Cc: <Arsk0jn@xxxxxxx>
> Sent: Saturday, August 12, 2000 11:32 AM
> Subject: Re: M. Prings discounted MetaStock's CDs.
>
>
> > The two best books by Martin Pring IMO are Investment
> Psychology Explained
> > and Martin Pring On Market Momentum. Joe Granville's first two books: A
> > Strategy of Daily Stock Market Timing for Maximum Profit, and
> Granville's
> New
> > Key to Stock Market Profits (where he introduces On-Balance Volume) are
> > excellent. If you have the math background, I also would recommend P. J.
> > Kaufman's Commodity Systems Trading and Methods. Others on my
> top ten list
> > are Gerald Appel's Winning Market Systems and everything by
> Larry Williams
> > including the many trading systems he has developed over the
> years and his
> > old newsletters. Last, from a technical analysis standpoint are Bill
> Williams
> > books on Chaos Theory. On the fundamental side, I think William J.
> O'Neil's
> > books and IDB will give you the initial screening you will need. I,
> > personally, have not been able to apply e-wave theory in a consistent
> enough
> > manner to use it, in spite of many years of effort. Sometimes
> it was very
> > very good and other times it was horrid! (like the little girl). My
> > evaluation of all of the experts on this theory have left me
> with the same
> > conclusion: sometimes they do very well and other times they are totally
> > wrong.
> >
> > These recommendations are based on my background with master degrees in
> > business and applied mathematics and extensive computer programming of
> more
> > than 130 systems that I have programmed for others, without charge, in
> > exchange for learning what they thought was worth using. It is
> also based
> on
> > over 44 years of successful market investment and trading and
> reading over
> > 145 books on the subject.
> >
> > My final offering is a saying used on Wall Street: "You make
> money in your
> > business and loose it in the other guy's business." If you have not
> invested
> > the time and effort to make financial investing and trading
> your business,
> > you are in the "other guy's business".
> >
> > Hopefully these thoughts and recommendations will cut some of
> the time off
> > what I have gone through to make you consistently successful in the
> markets.
> >
> > Good trading,
> > Joe Nemecek
>
>
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