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  • How to Beat Wall Street

  • Everything You Need to Make Money in the Markets Plus! 20 Trading System Ideas
  • By: J. B. Marwood
  • Narrated by: John Eastman
  • Length: 5 hrs and 52 mins
  • 2.5 out of 5 stars (2 ratings)

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How to Beat Wall Street

By: J. B. Marwood
Narrated by: John Eastman
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Summary

Comes with free Amibroker trading system code and over 80 additional spreadsheets of historical data. All can be downloaded free from the JB Marwood website with purchase of the audiobook.

Malcolm Gladwell claims the key to success in any task is the accumulation of at least 10,000 hours of practice.

JB Marwood has such experience and has used it well of late, correctly predicting the bottom in stocks in 2009 and the top in gold in 2012.

He discloses numerous tips and secrets that professionals use to trade the markets and reveals 20 fully disclosed trading systems that work on real, historical data-many of which generate returns of over 20% per annum.

Praise for How to Beat Wall Street:

“This book is crucial for those wanting to get a head start and learn how the financial markets really operate.” -Richard Budden, Fidelity UK

"I would put this on a top ten list of books for new traders and I have read hundreds and even written a few of those books myself.” -Steve Burns.

How to Beat Wall Street covers a vast amount of material in a concise and easy to read way including:

-Trading fundamentals: Central banks, inflation, Keynes, economic indicators…-Timing: Financial ratios, volatility analysis, Dow Theory, stock market cycles…-Risk: Money management techniques, trading psychology…-Secrets & Tips: News trading, volume analysis, seasonal patterns…-Technical analysis: MACD, moving averages, Bollinger Bands… -Trading systems: Design & optimisation, 20 stock trading strategies, fully disclosed Amibroker systems… -Resources & bonus material: Comprehensive resource material, best trading books bibliography and bonus section...

And more…

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your My Library section along with the audio.

©2013, 2014 Joe Marwood (P)2014 Joe Marwood
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Another "Trading is easy!" book.

This isn't the worst of the "trading is easy" books I've run across, but it is fairly typical of then genre. Lots of hype about making millions, superficial economic analysis, trading cliches, and talk of "beating the professionals". You're barraged with dozens of possible strategies, and then expected to go on your way and throw your money into the meat-grinder. As often with these kinds of books, much of the advice is perfectly valid, but it's just naive (cynical on the part of the author) about how likely people are to win on the basis of the information provided.

I didn't care much for the narrator either: a cliched "upbeat self-help" tone.

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