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University Training – Beginner, Intermediate and Advance by VectorVest

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Product Description

01 – Beginner

01-1 – Getting Started – Homepage

01-2 – VectorVest Views

01-3 – Stock Viewer

01-4 – WatchLists

01-5 – VectorVest Graphs

02-1 – Finding the Right Stocks – Strategies

02-2 – Trends

02-3 – High-Lows

02-4 – Deltas

02-5 – Building-Modifying Searches

03-1 – Testing Your Ideas – Creating a Personal Portfolio

03-1 – Testing Your Ideas – Creating-Updating a Test Portfolio

04-1 – VectorVest Simple

05-1 – Financial Success in just 15 Minutes or less

06-1 – The Investment Climate

 

02 – Intermediate

01-1 – Gaining the Trader’s Edge – ProTrader Searches

01-2 – Gaining the Trader’s Edge – ProTrader Graphs

02-1 – Putting It All Together – Market Timing Graph

02-2 – Putting It All Together – Riding the Wave

03-1 – Calling A Bottom – Strategy of the Week

04-1 – Buy Low and Sell High – Strategy of the Week

 

03 – Advanced

01-1 – Introduction to the Simulator

01-2 – Basic Navigation

01-3 – Basic QuickSims

01-4 – Basic Simulations

01-5 – Enhancing Simulations

02-1 – Introduction to Options – Types of Options

02-2 – Option Characteristics vs. Stocks

02-3 – Option Terminology

02-4 – Option Pricing

02-5 – Option Tools within VectorVest

02-6 – Buying Calls

02-7 – Buying Puts

03-1 – Option Tools – Covered Call

03-1 – Option Tools – Introduction – Long Call

03-1 – Option Tools – Long Put

04-1 – Introduction to the Variator

04-2 – QuickVariator

04-3 – Basic Variations

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.