Courses Infomation
Bruce Gilmore – Trading to Win Course. One Day at Time (2004 ed.)
Bruce Gilmore – Trading to Win Course. One Day at Time (2004 ed.)
**More information:
Description
This book has received praise for its strategy for trading the S&P 500 futures intraday since its release in 2004.
You may now purchase the book as an e-Book on Bryce Gilmore’s website.
On his website, the book is now listed at $200 AUD (Australian dollars), which, as of today (July 21), is equal to $183 USD. Because it was kept hidden for 10 years without being touched, the book is in pristine condition. It was only ever opened so that a few photos could be taken for this item. Listed below are some of the subjects the book touches on:
— Market Mechanisms (how futures markets operate)
– Trend, Support, and Resistance
– Charts for three bar swings
— Previous Highs and Lows
– The Balance Point Rule of 50%
– The rule of 1:1 overbalancing
– The two-day correction policy
– Indicators of Short-Term Trends
– Bars that reverse
– Patterns of Reversal
– Patterns of Continuation
Tools for General Patterns
Gaps, Days When the Gap Reverses, and Average Daily Range
– Futures Market Open Interest
– Economic Indicators, Reports, and News Events
– Ineffective Trade Entry and Exit Procedures
– Daily Patterns of Range
– Cardinal Ratios and Sacred Geometry
– Market Corrections and Geometric Ratios
– Market Bearish Trends
– Market Bullish Trends
– Alternate Waves and Levels of Retracement
A reverse cross
– Levels on the inside, outside, and double cross
– My X-ABCD Approach to Price Geometry
– Former Illustrations of X-ABCD Reversals
– Unusual Retracement Targets and Levels
– Trading Setups for Basic Goods
(Market Logic)
– Checklist for Each Day
Week-by-Week Checklist
– Rollover of Contract
– Trading’s psychological aspects
– My Opinions on Beating the Market
The 355 page book has several charting examples.
From the images, you can tell that it is spiral-bound.
 Trading Course
So what is trading?
Trade involves the transfer of goods or services from one person or entity to another, often in exchange for money.
Economists refer to a system or network that allows trade as a market.
An early form of trade, barter, saw the direct exchange of goods and services for other goods and services.
Barter involves trading things without the use of money. When either bartering party started to involve precious metals,
these gained symbolic as well as practical importance.[citation needed] Modern traders generally negotiate through a medium of exchange,
such as money. As a result, buying can be separated from selling, or earning. The invention of money (and later of credit,
paper money and non-physical money) greatly simplified and promoted trade.
Trade between two traders is called bilateral trade, while trade involving more than two traders is called multilateral trade.
Salepage : Bruce Gilmore – Trading to Win Course. One Day at Time (2004 ed.)
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