Description

Simplertrading – Beware the Bear: How to Prepare for the Next Bear Market

**More information:

Get Simplertrading – Beware the Bear: How to Prepare for the Next Bear Market at bestoftrader.com

Description

What will you learn?

Join David Starr For This Exclusive Training on How to Beat a Next Bear Market Beware the Bear

  • How to Confirm a Downtrend
  • How to Set Downside Expectations
  • Warning Signs that Precede a Bear Market
  • How to Identify Eventual Bottoms
  • How to Identify if a Top is Forming in Real-Time
  • What Trading Strategies to Avoid in a Bear Market
  • How to Prepare for the Next Bear Market (And How to Trade it)
  • How to Win (Consistently) in a Bear Market
  • SPECIAL BONUS: Beginner’s Guide to Elliott Wave class ($97 Value)

About the Content Providers:

  • About David: Elliot Wave expert, who focuses on broad markets, primarily the S&P 500, Euro, Gold, and Crude Oil. He likes to get exposure to these markets through a range of instruments including futures, index options, options on ETFs, and options on futures. Focuses on understanding trend and countertrend moves on all timeframes. Traders of all levels can benefit from his style of Elliot Wave and directional analysis.Beware the Bear
  • David Starr
    VP, Quantitative Analysis

    Trading Profile: Aggressive, futures, options, commodities and forex. Swing Trader, Elliott Wave expert, directionally biased + trend follower, covered calls/puts, butterflies, condors, calendars, diagonalsBeware the Bear

    Recommended for: Any size account, beginner to advanced traders, can make use of David’s thoughts on the trend. He shares some of the trades he takes as well as providing education on setups that can be used in specific situations.Beware the Bear

Forex Trading – Foreign Exchange Course

Want to learn about Forex?

Foreign exchange, or forex, is the conversion of one country’s currency into another.
In a free economy, a country’s currency is valued according to the laws of supply and demand.
In other words, a currency’s value can be pegged to another country’s currency, such as the U.S. dollar, or even to a basket of currencies.
A country’s currency value may also be set by the country’s government.
However, most countries float their currencies freely against those of other countries, which keeps them in constant fluctuation.