Home Stock Investing Guides Stock Trading Guides
 

How to Get Started in Active Trading and Investing

3

Product Description

“Online investing is ‘back in vogue . . . ‘”
–The Wall Street Journal

Wall Street Journal bestselling author David Nassar changed the course of independent investing–and sold more than 100,000 books–with his landmark How to Get Started in Electronic Day Trading. Times and markets have changed, however, and a sense of caution has replaced that period’s go-for-the-gusto ethos.

At the same time, millions of traders and investors can’t help but see–and hunger for–the fast-turnaround trading profits that are still there for the taking. How to Get Started in Active Trading and Investing is once again the right book at the right time, distancing itself from the day-trading mania with profitable strategies and techniques for this all-new market. Essential reading for today’s new breed of commonsense trader/investor, it explains how to:

  • Understand–and profit from–the moves of market makers
  • Discover and implement a personalized trading style
  • Improve market-timing skills and instincts

How to Get Started in Active Trading and Investing

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Add to favorites
  • Propeller
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz

Tags: Active, Investing, Started, Trading.

Filed under Stock Investing 0 Comments. #

Comments on How to Get Started in Active Trading and Investing Leave a Comment

March 6, 2010
Reply

Sarah Giani @ 4:02 pm #

This book is great for a novice. He outlines techniques in technical analysis and even a little fundamental analysis. From there, the reader can choose which method to expand on through further reading.
Rating: 4 / 5

Reply

E. E. Mortenson @ 4:15 pm #

Great combination of broad overview, and specific analytical techniques. I powered through this book in a few days…partly to quench my newfound thirst for daytrading education, and partly because it is so well written and easy to read.
It wasn’t dumbed down and it wasn’t too technical. Good for beginner to intermediate trader. This is NOT a complete trading guide by any means, but it is a wonderful overview. If you want a lot of theory, this is not the book. The author recommends books on certain topics if you want to expand your knowledge (apparently there is an entire book devoted to candlestick charts).
Rating: 5 / 5

Reply

James Lor @ 5:00 pm #

This book is a great introduction to trading and technical analysis. The author explains the technical analysis patterns, and more importantly, the financial psychology behind those patterns. He explains how supply and demand, and the human behavior of greed and fear create those patterns.

The only shortcoming is that there isn’t much material on the other important aspects of trading like money management, position sizing, risk management, system testing / validation. For that, you would still need a book like Van K. Tharp’s “Trade your Way to Financial Freedom” or Marcel Link’s “High Probability Trading”. I would have rated this 4 and 1/2 stars if there was such a rating. Worth more than 4 stars, but not quite 5 stars.

Overall, this book is a great primer, and would still be a very good value at twice the price.
Rating: 4 / 5

Leave a Comment

Click here to cancel reply.

Fields marked by an asterisk (*) are required.

Recent Posts

  • The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing – A Book of Practical Counsel
  • Wealth Management: The Financial Advisor’s Guide to Investing and Managing Client Assets
  • Investing in Human Capital: A Capital Markets Approach to Student Funding
  • Straight Talk on Investing: What You Need to Know
  • Investing Without Fear: Protect Your Wealth in all Markets and Transform Crash Losses into Crash Profits

Recent Comments

  • Anonymous on Wealth Management: The Financial Advisor’s Guide to Investing and Managing Client Assets
  • A. Todd Black on Wealth Management: The Financial Advisor’s Guide to Investing and Managing Client Assets
  • Anonymous on Wealth Management: The Financial Advisor’s Guide to Investing and Managing Client Assets
  • Anonymous on Investing in Human Capital: A Capital Markets Approach to Student Funding
  • Arthur Allen on Straight Talk on Investing: What You Need to Know

Categories

  • Stock Investing
  • Stock Trading
  • Trading Options


Similar Posts

  • What Wall Street Doesn’t Want You to Know: How You Can Build Real Wealth Investing in Index Funds
  • The Active Trader: Essential Tools to Profit in the Stock Market
  • The Profit Hunter: Beating the Bulls, Taming the Bears, and Slaughtering the Pigs
  • Beyond Wall Street: The Art of Investing
  • Scam Dogs and Mo-Mo Mamas: Inside the Wild and Woolly World of Internet Stock Trading

Popular Posts

  • Standard & Poor's Sector Investing: How to Buy The Right Stock in The Right Industry at The Right Time 2 comment(s) | 21 view(s)
  • Commercial Real Estate Investing For Dummies 10 comment(s) | 17 view(s)
  • Market Indicators: The Best-Kept Secret to More Effective Trading and Investing 4 comment(s) | 15 view(s)
  • The Triumph of Contrarian Investing : Crowds, Manias, and Beating the Market by Going Against the Grain 5 comment(s) | 14 view(s)
  • Value Investing Course: Essential Strategies for Market-beating Returns 0 comment(s) | 14 view(s)

Tag Cloud

About Approach Book Complete Dummies Earn Edition Estate Financial from Funds Future Guide Hedge High Investing Investment Investor Investor's Little Made making Management Market Markets money Option Options Profit Real Returns Risk Safely Started Stock Stocks Strategies Street Successful System Trading Value Wall Wealth Winning
Home | About | Stock Investing Guides | Stock Trading Guides
Copyright Stock Investing and Trading Guides, 2010
Made with the Semiologic theme • Classy, Gold skin by Denis de Bernardy