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Barry Rudd – Stock Patterns for Day Trading Home Study Course
nnStock Patterns For Day Trading Home Study Course, Barry Rudd & Matt Rudd in 3 DVD + 10 hours of Level II quote screen tutorialsnnThis Stock Patterns For Day Trading describes the trading strategies used by a professional stock trader in his own trading. The ideas come both from friends who are successful traders as well as his own experience with SOES trading. The collection of trading patterns described represents one of the first full-fledged books of instruction on short term, swing and day trading in individual stocks. The author’s intraday trend trading approach and his scalping method are both described in detail. He uses the setups daily in his own trading. This course should prove valuable to the thousands of short term stock traders who seek to make their living from speculating on short term price swings. It is a toolbox for finding high probability trades for success as you trade the stock market. The technical ideas are primarily crafted around the personality of the NASDAQ market but may also be implemented in New York trades.nnVIDEO I (Introduction Module)nnIntroduction to electronic direct access trading for stock day tradersnOverview of Investing, Swing Trading, and Day TradingnThe NYSE – structure of an “auction” marketnNYSE order routing with SuperDOTnRole of the SpecialistnThe structure of the NASDAQ marketnNASDAQ order routingnUnderstanding ECNs (Electronic Communications Networks)nRole of the Market MakersnBasic terminologynUnderstanding the Level II quote windownComponents of the basic screen layout for your computernWhat are price bar charts?nThe daily bar chartnThe 5 minute intraday bar chartnUnderstanding how to use the stock tickernOrder entry and management windowsnTracking the market indicesnUsing candlestick chartsnSummarynLevel II quote screen tutorialnnVIDEO IInnIntroduction to methodology section of course (for tapes 2 – 6)nWhy use price bar charts to day trade?nScalping vs. intraday trend trading – overviewnFind a trading style that fits your personalitynKnow your exit price before you enter a tradenThe “Wiggle” – a detailed explanationnHow to determine the current wiggle for each stock you tradenGenerating a computer screen layout for your tradingnNavigating your tickers, charts, stock box and time and sales windowsnInterpreting your tickersnWhich indices to follow and whynUtilizing the “new high, new low” tickern5 minute bar chart patternsnConsolidation breakout pattern – the dynamicsnTiming your entry with the Level II & time and sales to get the best entry pricenSpotting breakout patterns in advancenUsing another Level II window as a “launching pad” for trade entrynnVIDEO IIInnWhat constitutes consolidation – the 3 main criterianTying the bar chart price to the Level II quote screennInterpreting the time and sales “prints” in relation to Level II quote movement as a way to uncover buying or selling pressurenThe Bull’s Horn pattern on the 5 minute chartnListening to the market and reacting – don’t force a tradenIntraday wedge patternnUsing the prior day’s intraday chart to enhance consolidation breakout tradesnSupport and Resistance on micro and daily time frames – a visual indicator of potential halting pointsn“Shotgun” pattern on the 5 minute bar chart with ensuing volume influxn“L” pattern on the 5 minute bar chartnMorning “Flashback” or headfake patternnComputer screen examples of 5 minute bar chart patternsnWide Range Day with Extreme Close – daily bar chart setupnWide Range Day with slight gap outside, slight gap inside, the opening even with prior day’s close, and the big gap opennTrading off micro support and resistance zones on wide range daysnLarge price gap plays on the daily bar chartnnVIDEO IVnnMore on large gap openings on the daily bar chartnComputer screen examples of wide range day setupsnReversal setups on the daily bar chartnIntraday (5 minute bar chart) dynamics of the Reversal setupnWhere to enter and exit a reversal tradenScanning your daily charts to create a hit-list for the next trading sessionnThe alternative entry to the intraday consolidation breakoutnThe dangers of “randomly” picking tops and bottoms of price swings intradaynVariation on the initial wiggle to better minimize losses on a losing tradenDaily congestion breakout plays – more stocks for the morning hit-listnComputer screen examples of the Reversal setupnProfit Targets – likely halting points to exit a trade:n1. Daily price support and resistancen2. Retracement of a Wide Range Dayn3. Reversal setup profit targetn4. 50 & 200 day simple moving averagesn5. The closing of a price gap on the daily chartn6. Price spike on intraday chartn7. Significant reversal in direction of market indices intradaynFilters – filtering out the best potential day tradesn1. Too near a profit targetn2. Beware of trading a stock during daily congestionn3. The cyclical nature of a stock’s “trader friendly” moden4. Significance of the typical daily range of a stocknComputer screen examples of profit targets and filtersnSummary – tying together all the trading analysisnTrade checklist – 14 step flowchart process for evaluating, trading and managing high probability tradesnnGet Barry Rudd – Stock Patterns for Day Trading Home Study Course downloadnnVIDEO VnnFading (counter trend trading) techniques – not randomly picking tops and bottoms, but using specific criteria insteadnProfit target reactionsn“Tagging”n“Big Stack and a Rainbow”nNASDAQ Level II quote screen – a fuller understandingnUsing 4 key factors to gauge the risk of a stockn1. The bid/ask spreadn2. Number of Market Makers and ECNs per price leveln3. Number of shares posted by each Market Maker and ECNn4. The price difference between each “price level”nHow a Market Maker can act as the “ax” or “hammer” in a stocknRelative Strength – daily and intraday – one of the most important factors in your trading decisionsnMarket Indices – the trend vs. the immediate direction on the 5 minute chartnMicro support and resistance on the indicesnTypical market index behavior – morning move, mid-day, and afternoon movennVIDEO VInnComputer screen index examples of relative strengthnTime of day – finding the best times to trade (and the ones to avoid)nWhat stocks to trade – how to choose your basket of stocksnTrade analysis – trading as a businessnManaging your trading vs. just managing a tradenMoney management – a three step approach to help minimize risk and lock in profitsnIPOs and news tradesnScalping profitably – beware the pitfallsnThe art of tradingnSome footage of “live trading”nnThe “Stock Patterns for Day Trading Home Study Course” retail at $495.The training seminar cost $3,000. This Course were Sold out at the author’s website.nn
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