by Thomas R. DeMark
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| List Price: | $90.00 |
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Product Description From the world's foremost authority on chart analysis-- a practical new treatise on mastering powerful trading tools and systems In the sequel to his best-selling book, The New Science of Technical Analysis, Tom DeMark refines the most popular and precise of his indicators with exacting new attention to real-time trading applications. For the first time, DeMark shares his powerful new indicator, TD Combo, which when combined with the highly popular Sequential Combination is a powerful new tool for understanding market rhythm and calculating price points. THOMAS DeMARK (Phoenix, Arizona) and his technical indicators have been a major force at some of the largest and most successful trading operations in the world, including his own firm, Devan Capital.
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Average Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
This is a copy of software flyer to me., 2008-06-21 This book is software flyer. The differences is that most flyers are free. This one you have to pay to read the flyer. Don't waste your time and money on it. There's very good trading psychology book that you you don't want to miss---What I Learned Losing a Million Dollars. The author of the book is a registered seller @ Amazon.com. Buy from him through Amazon. You will love this book if you are a serious trader and want to be successful. Guaranteed. Best luck trading to everyone.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
Wow. I am so dum. I am a sheep. I reely need this book., 2008-04-24 Wow, what an amazingly correlated set of Amazon reviews. Something like 90% display the following curious features:
1. Written by a big cheese wall street guy or equivalent
2. Effusively positive about this astoundingly important book
3. Uniform contention that detractors are ignorant
4. You'll lose out on big bucks if you don't buy it
5. Book can bring famously great financial results
6. Only the industrious deserve to reap
7. Jillions of people find the positive reviews to be *extremely* helpful
Or not.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Poorly Written, 2008-04-12 This is an extremely convoluted book that takes a Philadelphia lawyer to figure out. Mr. DeMark launches right into extremely technical applications of his different trademarked bar identification codes without first giving the slightest clue to basic structure and premise of his bar identification counts. This book is quite expensive too, even through a discount seller such as Amazon. To be retained by such fabled traders as Paul Jones, Leon Cooperman, Steve Cohen and others it makes me wonder if they couldn't figure out bar his count system either and the only way to find out was to hire him? This is a sophisticated technique with anything of the slightest technical nature. To make it so complex the publisher can't figure out what he is publishing and the reader has to think the writer is pretty smart because he sure as hell can't figure out what he is writing about. I cannot recommend this book. Save your money.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
Sequential/Combo and ... stuff, 2007-11-23 There are both good and bad things about DeMark's book.
Good - two chapters on Sequential and Combo. It is the most detailed examination of the various contingencies one finds himself in when applying these indicators. The text is sometimes copy/paste identical - but that's partly because the indicators are similar.
DeMark took a very intuitive, but confusing notion of trend exhaustion and designed two systems around it - built primarily on the time aspect of trading.
I also find DeMark pivots useful in combination with other indicators.
Bad - droning monothone of the presentation. The two "good" chapters, for example, would have benefited greatly from a flow-chart presentation of the indicators.
Bad - excessive self-aggrandizement and trade-marking of things known long before him. Retracements - both relative and absolute - go back to at least 1920's. Similar for TD Lines, TD Channel I-II and, let us not forget, TD Wave...
I guess, I wouldn't mind if he were to simply explain why 1/4 of a Fib. retracement makes a good daily channel (because it's so darn close to a round number of 5%) - it's the endless TD'ing of everthing in sight that is objectionable.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
tour de force of technical d'avant garde, 2007-10-23 After reading this book, I understood wholeheartly why so many institutional traders employ Demark's ideas and concepts in their operations. As you know, they are no dummies when it comes to markets. They breathe, eat, and sleep with markets on daily basis. And they use the most ruthless weapons in their arsenals. Tom Demark's tools are exactly just that, sharp cold steely market weapons. Needless to say, I learned a lot from this book. In fact, more so than his previous book.

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