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Usually ships in 1 business days | | | Chicago's hottest traders reveal their Midas-touch secrets. In Trading Chicago Style, futures trading stars explain how they reached the pinnacle of Chicago's rough-and-tumble, lightning-fast commodities markets. Packed with winning tips, strategies, and methods, this book delivers closely guarded advice and genuine secrets that were - until now - not available anywhere else. Each chapter features trading techniques of one of today's market wizards, along with computer techniques and off-floor methods. Traders from every major chicago exchange - Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Chicago Board of Trade, Chicago Board of Exchange, and Chicago Stock Exchange - are included.Aggressive traders will love its easy-reading style and its immediately useful techniques. Traders looking for that extra trading edge will find it in Trading Chicago Style. Chicago's hottest traders reveal their Midas-touch secrets. In Trading Chicago Style, futures trading stars explain how they reached the pinnacle of Chicago's rough-and-tumble, lightning-fast commodities markets. Packed with winning tips, strategies, and methods, this book delivers closely guarded advice and genuine secrets that were - until now - not available anywhere else. Each chapter features trading techniques of one of today's market wizards, along with computer techniques and off-floor methods. Traders from every major chicago exchange - Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Chicago Board of Trade, Chicago Board of Exchange, and Chicago Stock Exchange - are included. Aggressive traders will love its easy-reading style and its immediately useful techniques. Traders looking for that extra trading edge will find it in Trading Chicago Style. | | | |
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| | Product Details | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 9 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Tricks of a Chicago Huckster Aug 09, 2006 I took this guy's 'boot camp' course and wished I had enlisted in the military boot camp as I would have been less likely to get shell-shocked. I have no one to blame for accepting this huckster's claims. I am a big boy but I was gullible. No longer! This charlatan has a new book out called 'tricks of a trader' and I could write a book 'tricked by a supposed trader/charlatan'. I fell for it once but not again. I wish he would produce his trading results as I am certain he has made more moeny by selling a handful of books than he ever did trading. Am I qualified to criticize this book and the author? I know I am. I belong to the national technicians soiety and although I spend a portion of my time in the real estate business, I am well read on technical anslysis. Many well-known technicians know I do good research. You might call me the 'technician's policeman.' I am prepared to call to task anyone who looks to pass himself off as an expert. My math background serves me well in this regard. Bottom line is avoid anything this jamoke has to sell as it is all tripe.
5 of 8 found the following review helpful:
The Real Mark Brown Dec 15, 2004 Neal Weintraub is a good friend of mine and I am mentioned in some of his books. I have always found him to be a honest and trustworthy promoter of the futures industry. I see others are writing very negative reviews about Neal's books using my name and location in the US. I am a very vocal critic of scams in the business and it is very unfortunate that Amazon does not better police their web site to assure potential book buyers of the real identity of who is making comments. www.markbrown.com Mark Brown
4 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Negative contribution to industry Nov 28, 2004 I have jousted and admonnished the author for years regarding his poetic license to fabricate useless methods on trading beginning with the programmer's forum. He professed nothing but non-sense back then and he has not deviated from this fruitless journey. This book should NOT be read even if free. A total waste of time. It is an attmept to capitalize on a great book, Jack Schwager's Market Wizard's. An appropriate title for this book is "trading Loser's Style".
5 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Total waste of print and time Nov 24, 2004 It's amazing what this guy attempts to pass off as value. First of all he represents he is a trader of reknown. This is total rubbish. Being from Chicago myself I knwo that this guy is a total charlatan and he never made a dime trading. He was a part time trader on the 'baby' mid america exchange. It is equivalent to playing the penny slot machines. The interviews he conducts are made with traders who are of higher stature than the writer--I use that term lightly--but that is like calling a midget a giant since everything is relative. I would like to write that I axquired one morsel of information from this book but all I got was worthless words. I cannot recommend any less this book. Instead of even reading it, I recommend you pound your head against the wall since that would be more gratifying.
2 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Nice insight from real traders Jun 06, 2003 Wow! this book has some bad reviews. I am really surprised, perhaps some of the reviewers really expected to be handed a real trading system for 29.95. The book jacket definitely over-promises based on what is inside, but there is still tremendous value in here. If you look past the blatant attempts by some of the interviewees to market their services and take the nuggets where you find them then you will have not wasted your time.I know several of the traders interviewed in the book. They have reputations that span the spectrum. But the really outstanding interviews were of the traders that you don't find interviewed in other texts. The nameless Phantom, CV, the Committee and Mark Brown interviews come to mind. They are worth the price of the book. The pit stops are also useful, but in some cases are found in other texts
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