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Stephen W.Bigalow – CAT 2007 Seminar
Stephen W.Bigalow – CAT 2007 Seminar
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Stephen W. Bigalow has worked as a stockbroker for eight years at prestigious Wall Street firms Kidder Peabody & Company, Cowen & Company, and Oppenheimer & Company. He has over 25 years of investment expertise overall. Following this, there were twelve years of real estate investing interspersed with fifteen years of commodity trading. He graduated from Cornell University with a degree in business and economics, and during the past 20 years, he has lectured both at Cornell and at numerous private educational investment events.
Mr. Bigalow is known throughout the trading community as the “professional’s professional” and has provided advice to professional traders, money managers, mutual funds, and hedge funds. He belongs to the “Market Technicians Association” as a member. AAPTA, the American Association of Professional Technical Analysts, and mta.org, a non-profit organization of professional technical analysts. (aapta.us) Through online webinar training sessions, Stephen Bigalow teaches JAPANESE CANDLESTICKS.
In January 2002, John Wiley & Sons released his debut book, Profitable Candlestick Trading: Pinpointing Market Opportunities to Maximize Profits. The book is aimed at everyone from the novice investor to the most knowledgeable specialists. The way it is written makes it simple to see how the Candlestick signals contain a wealth of knowledge about price movement and investor psychology. He stresses that investors, particularly novice investors, can glean information from the signals. This material substantially broadens an investor’s perspective and is filled with sensible investment principles. There is no longer a need to rely on investment experts after reading the book. For more information on the book Profitable Candlestick Trading, go to this link.
High Profit Candlestick Patterns: Turning Investor Sentiment into High Profits, written by Mr. Bigalow, was published by Profit Publishing in December 2005. This book elevates trading by fusing successful Western technical analysis with the results-driven Japanese Candlestick charting. With quick visual inspections, profitable investing is easier to master. For further information, go to High Profit Candlestick Patterns.
His involvement with Candlesticks dates back more than fifteen years. Around this period, candlesticks made their entrance into American homes for the first time. An efficient training approach has been developed using this vast experience. A comprehensive training curriculum that is simple to follow was developed over the course of fifteen years by consolidating the lessons learned from failures and potential dangers.
Mr. Bigalow has focused his investment savvy throughout his career on creating more effective ways to profit from the financial markets. His investigation into every fundamental and technical technique led to the confirmation that Candlestick analysis was better than all others. He has effectively integrated traditional research techniques with Candlestick analysis in his consultancy work with money management and energy trading organizations to significantly increase investment profits. His integration of statistical analysis with the Japanese Candlestick approach has led to the development of some innovative, profitable trading programs.
Mr. Bigalow has also contributed to the development of successful techniques for teaching people “how” to use Candlestick signals profitably. Excellent books that describe candlestick formation are available on the market. To effectively trade the signals using that knowledge, the Candlestick Trading Forum was founded.
Stock trading course: Learn about Stock trading
A stock trader or equity trader or share trader is a person or company involved in trading equity securities.
Stock traders may be an agent, hedger, arbitrageur, speculator, stockbroker.
Such equity trading in large publicly traded companies may be through a stock exchange.
Stock shares in smaller public companies may be bought and sold in over-the-counter (OTC) markets.
Stock traders can trade on their own account, called proprietary trading, or through an agent authorized to buy and sell on the owner’s behalf.
Trading through an agent is usually through a stockbroker. Agents are paid a commission for performing the trade.
Major stock exchanges have market makers who help limit price variation (volatility) by buying and selling a particular company’s shares on their own behalf and also on behalf of other clients.
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