Editorial Reviews: Review: "When a chart speaks, you listen" should be the title of this presentation. Written as if you were watching a live colorful PowerPoint presentation, with tens and tens of charts all showing the same basic winning pattern, it is hard to believe that it can be so simple, yet so hard! ---A. Greenberg, Master Chartist Of Over 40 Years "Thank you so much for making charts speak to me!" ---Adam J. "With tens of stocks to watch on the watchlist in the book, it would be ...
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Editorial Reviews: Review: "When a chart speaks, you listen" should be the title of this presentation. Written as if you were watching a live colorful PowerPoint presentation, with tens and tens of charts all showing the same basic winning pattern, it is hard to believe that it can be so simple, yet so hard! ---A. Greenberg, Master Chartist Of Over 40 Years "Thank you so much for making charts speak to me!" ---Adam J. "With tens of stocks to watch on the watchlist in the book, it would be fascinating to see which ones are going to make the big runs in 2021 and beyond. I must admit, I am not surprised to see so many Biotech stocks! Read this and learn to build your own watchlist of potential winners!" ---Larry F. "Do you see, or do you observe? Hit the nail on the head! Well worth many-fold the subscription fees I pay for many stock-market services! Actual executable implementable knowledge in this book that can be used for a lifetime - it is priceless." ---J. O'Neill From The Back Cover: Where are the next stocks like Tesla of 2020? Or Mirati Therapeutics of 2017-2020? Are they on your watchlist of stocks? How to learn to get such stocks on your watchlist? How to buy such stocks and hold them for the most fruitful and rewarding periods of time? Once you do find such stocks, do you know when to buy, when to sell, how much to buy? You can lose on a winning stock too. You could sell a winning stock too early or too late. When is the right time to get in and get out? Is it even possible to time the stock or the market? How well do you know yourself? Can you separate your "self" from your "actions" in the stock market? Is it easy? Is it hard? Can it be learned? About the Author: Brad Koteshwar began trading foreign currencies and Treasury bond futures in the mid-eighties. He started trading stocks in 1987 and within months was wiped out on Black Monday, 1987. Having worked with major firms in the 1980s, which are now defunct, he went on to work for himself in the 1990s. Having tasted the freedom of being on his own, he has never looked back. Now, approaching the end of his fourth decade in the markets, he leads a simple and uncomplicated life and uses the same simple uncomplicated approach to his stock market evaluation and activity. Many years have passed since his last book. But the lessons and the methods have not changed. The subtle art of speculation has not changed. The messages in the charts are clear, if only you can observe.
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