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Re: M. Prings discounted MetaStock's CDs.



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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