The Wyckoff Trading Course – Series will give you a foundational understanding of and ability to start using the Wyckoff Method, which allows traders and investors to anticipate market direction through analysis of price, volume and time, without the need for additional indicators. This Method, which is used by many successful professional and institutional traders, works in all time frames in all freely traded markets.
The Wyckoff Trading Course – Series will provide you with practical tools to apply this timeless methodology, and will teach you how to learn to “read the market,” so that you can trade alongside the large institutions that generate (and stop) big trends.
Contents:
This course includes 12 weekly 2 1/2-hour webinars, divided into 4 sections:
(1) Wyckoff Structural Price Analysis
Description: In Section #1 you will learn how to to read market structure by applying Wyckoff's cardinal insights regarding the interplay of price, volume and time. Understanding market structure allows you to anticipate coming price action. You will learn to identify and analyze accumulation, distribution, re-accumulation and re-distribution – the key trading ranges that power trends. You will also learn Wyckoff Method trade set-ups based on market structure, how to enter a new or an existing trend, and how to recognize in advance when a trend is likely to end.
The Price Cycle: Accumulation, Mark-Up, Distribution and Mark-Down
Change of Character in an established trend: identifying a change from a trending to a non-trending environment
Change of Character in a trading range: identifying price and volume action signaling the initiation or continuation of a trend
Trading ranges that generate big trends: accumulation and distribution
A key concept in Wyckoff Method analysis of trading ranges: Phases
Phase anatomy: Wyckoff Method events (e.g., climaxes, tests, springs, upthrusts, signs of strength)
Identifying phases in accumulation and distribution
Characteristics of re-accumulation and re-distribution trading ranges
Distinguishing re-accumulation from distribution and re-distribution from accumulation
Three Wyckoff Method rules for trades based on market structure
Delineating Buying and Selling Zones using the Wyckoff Method, including entry and exit strategies
Exercises and homework assignments
(2) Supply and Demand:
Here Mr. Bogomazov will focus in detail on identifying supply and demand on any chart. The Wyckoff Method is based on the assumption that all freely traded markets are governed by supply and demand. In today’s markets, as in Wyckoff’s time, large professional interests dominate supply and demand. Having the ability to accurately read supply and demand on a chart will allow you to make better decisions about timing your entries and exits and to join the large operators rather than being caught on the wrong side of a trade.
Concepts in supply and demand – the forces that move all markets
Who is the "Composite Operator" and how do his actions in the market affect supply and demand?
Volume and spread analysis
Variations of spread and volume in different market environments
Effort (volume) versus results (price action) – confirmation and discordance both predict future price behavior
Volume analysis and schematics in trading ranges
Volume characteristics in different phases of accumulation and distribution
Wyckoff’s springboard: when price is poised to move
Tradeable volume patterns
Exercises and homework assignments
(3) Relative and Comparative Strength:
Relative and comparative strength, the core of Section #3, are Wyckoff Method concepts that can help you select the top stocks in the best sectors to trade, particularly at market turns. In these sessions, you will learn how to apply these concepts to identify candidates for long or short trades, and how they can also be used to improve the timing of your entries and exits.
Relative and comparative strength analysis: how to choose the best vehicles to trade
Use of comparative strength for stock selection in the Wyckoff Method
Improving the Wyckoff Method's comparative strength analysis in trading ranges
Differences between relative and comparative performance
Using changes in relative strength or weakness to spot sectors and stocks to trade
Creating selection filters using relative and comparative strength to identify high-probability trades
Exercises and homework assignments
(4) Creating a customized Wyckoff trading plan.
The first three sections incorporate foundational elements of the Wyckoff Method and are designed to allow you to immediately apply standalone concepts in each to your own trading. To help students integrate these elements in greater depth, Mr. Bogomazov will teach how to create a Wyckoff trading plan in Section #4.
Using filters to improve selection of stocks or options to trade
Relative strength filters
Structural filters
Supply and demand filters
Using multiple filters to pinpoint the best trades and times to open positions
Market Analysis as a Filter – timing entries in sync with the market
Using Wyckoff Method concepts to create a trading plan
Back-testing your trading plan with a pre-formatted Excel template – key variables to track
Trading tactics for your Wyckoff trading plan: entries, position management, and exits
Exercises and homework assignments
Sale Page:
http://www.wyckoffanalytics.com/wyckoff-trading-course-summer-series
Thanks is due to "Matrix trader"
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