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Ron,
No idea! They used to stock it.. Give Amazon a call,
or try Barnes & Noble?
I know the book "Trading with DiNapoli Levels"
was the number-one best-seller at
Traders Press.
FYI, if you buy the book direct from Joe DiNapoli's
website you get free access to his proprietary client
web pages, a way better value than a book-seller discount.
There is a 30-day return guarantee on the book too (if
you order from the author), so it's a low-risk trade.
-Neal.
At 11:17 PM 3/15/2001 -0700, you wrote:
>Neal-
>
>Just wondering why the Dinapoli book is not available on Amazon, where most
>trading books are available, along with a wide range of reader reviews? It
>is always nice to get a variety of opinions before plunking down $160 for
>yet another TA tome.....
>
>Ron Scott
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: owner-metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>[mailto:owner-metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Neal Hughes
>Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2001 9:12 PM
>To: metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>Subject: RE: Profit Stops
>
>
>
>Peter,
>
>When I started with Fibs, I read just about everything..
>
>There is a ton of intellectually interesting, entertaining,
>poetic, mystical, stuff about Fibonacci.. Some of it
>is so complex and theoretical there is no way to
>figure out how to apply it in the markets.. Some of the
>material seems as though it is written to intentionally
>mystify! Some of it works some of the time but only
>just enough to keep you interested..
>
>I eventually settled for Joe DiNapoli's techniques, see
>http://www.fibtrader.com because they are
>practical and make sense to me. Joe discards all the
>confusing aspects, and presents a solid trading plan.
>
>When I was newer to that stuff, I wrote a review on DiNapoli's
>book, you'll find it on the above website somewhere.
>
>I've since become a biased fan of these techniques,
>and I present seminars on DiNapoli techniques. These
>may not be the only Fib techniques that work, but they
>are my preference.
>
>I'm totally against trailing stops, for many reasons.
>I'm usually entering the market exactly where those
>with trailing stops are exiting. So they take the other
>side of my trade.. Trailing stops generate horrible
>slippage, and often get you out of the market at
>the worst time..
>
>-Neal.
>
>
>
>At 05:52 PM 3/15/2001 -0500, Peter Gialames wrote:
> >Do you have any good resouces on learning these Fib techniques? I have
> >always been intrigued by them, but never learned how to use them.
> >
> >Peter Gialames
> >
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: owner-metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >[mailto:owner-metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Neal Hughes
> >Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2001 4:22 PM
> >To: metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >Subject: Re: Profit Stops
> >
> >
> >
> >Fibonacci techniques are excellent for this.
> >
> >The idea is to calculate a profit objective so
> >you exit before a pullback..
> >
> >-Neal.
> >
> >
> >At 03:08 PM 3/15/2001 -0500, you wrote:
> > >I wonder if people could comment on profit stops. It seems that I buy
> > >stocks, the price increases, and then they fall down and I lose most of
>my
> > >profits. Is it best to stick with a trailing stop or should a certain
> >profit
> > >% be used to take profits? What profit stop should be used?
> > >
> > >neo
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