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Trading Simplified – Using High Probability Trading Techniques to Create a Winning Systems by Stan Kim

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Provides a step-by-step system for targeting big potential, high probability trades. Kim shares his expertise for: Selecting hot stocks, in the hottest industries; Evaluating the market’s daily reaction to news items; Determining where to enter a trade, using technical indicators to your trading advantage, when to place stops, how long to hold a position and more. Plus, assess your own trading temperament to produce a consistently high-returning trading system.

Traders who consistently reap big rewards, do so by breaking down the elements of trading into simple, manageable steps. Now, Stan Kim’s 90 minute video workshop does just that for all traders – providing a step-by-step system for targeting big potential, high probability trades.

Benefit from Kim’s expertise, as he shares his secrets for …

-Selecting hot stocks, in the hottest industries

-Evaluating the market’s daily reaction to news items

-Determining where to enter a trade, how to use technical indicators to your trading advantage, when to place stops, how long to hold a position – and so much more.

Plus – Kim outlines an easy, methodical way to improve the trading acumen of the one person who could be sabotaging your trading success – YOU! He shows how to assess your own trading patterns and ratios, as well as your own good AND bad habits – so you can develop a trading system, suited to your own temperament, that will produce optimal results, time and again.

Technical Analysis Day trading

How to understand about technical analysis: Learn about technical analysis

In finance, technical analysis is an analysis methodology for forecasting the direction of prices through the study of past market data, primarily price and volume.
Behavioral economics and quantitative analysis use many of the same tools of technical analysis, which,
being an aspect of active management, stands in contradiction to much of modern portfolio theory.
The efficacy of both technical and fundamental analysis is disputed by the efficient-market hypothesis, which states that stock market prices are essentially unpredictable.