Traders in today\'s fast-moving Financial Futures markets must contend with market noise that is ambiguous, contradictory, and (here\'s the worst part) almost entirely random.
It will help you remove much of t.
Beating the Financial Futures Market will show you how to simplify your trading program by strictly adhering, 100 percent of the time, to a focused roster of mechanical trading techniques.
Written by veteran commodities trader, systems designer, lecturer, author, and Chicago Board of Trade member Art Collins, this comprehensive trading handbook details: Guidelines for overcoming dead-end discretionary trading "insights" to focus on market-tested, mechanical trading rules and knowledge The four rules of prudent optimization, essential for identifying the best performing variables within your formulas Eight consistent Biases that, when followed, can lead you to more reliable and profitable trades Statistically verifiable Strategies for combining-and recombining-specific indicators based on prevailing market environments Actual Trade Station(c) summaries, showing in black and white which concepts worked and which didn\'t, and when and why The backroads of Financial Futures trading are littered with failed geniuses, traders who spent their days trying to outthink the markets.
How can you become one of the five to ten percent of traders that survive the learning curve, design a profitable system, and turn Financial Futures trading Into a profitable sideline or even a full-time career? Beating the Financial Futures Market provides you with a straightforward, historically proven program to cut through the noise, determine what bits of information are valuable, and integrate those bits Into an overall trading program designed to jump on lucrative trading opportunities as they occur.
But for those that learn the tricks of survival, the rewards can be phenomenal.
More than ninety percent of traders will eventually go broke trying to make sense of, and systemize, that noise.
Traders in today\'s fast-moving Financial Futures markets must contend with market noise that is ambiguous, contradictory, and (here\'s the worst part) almost entirely random