I will use my old business address....wizardtickets@gmail.com would love to have a look, thanks mate.
So I finally got a chance to a read a bit of it, some pages in depth, some parts just scanning. Keep in mind that I am fairly new to trading, but have been studying intensively. So first of all, the title is quite misleading. Maybe it was my expectations, but the way you go about day trading is nothing like what I've read about before, and doesn't seem to be a system that anyone here uses. Not saying it doesn't work, it just isn't what I thought it would be. The book is also more of a guide, being that its only 40 some odd pages long, many of which have pictures. It also struck me as odd that there are no charts, only the DOM, but I have read some people can trade strictly off of this. When you state that it is the speculators that make up most of the market, this strikes me as being the opposite of what I've been reading. I have come to learn that it is the Commercial Traders as you put it who do all the work. It is those guys who have to be buying for the price to move up, and it is those guys who we are trying to follow. To say that speculators are the biggest of the groups goes against this, and although you may be right, I'm not sure if I agree. Going through the book, I get the impression that this is more of a system, rather than a book on day trading. You bring up the importance of bonds, interest rates, currencies, futures and explain how all of these work together to move the economy. I can see how this can work, but once again, all this research seems to be not consistent with how most day traders on here work. I could very well not appreciate the power of the info contained in your book, but I just don't see myself trading in this fashion. In summary, it sounds like you know what you are talking about, and the type of trading you propose might lead to consistent profits, but this wasn't something that appealed to me. All the hard data you collect makes you put on a trade, but in the end, what price is doing is the ultimate deciding factor. If you have found a statistical advantage to using all this economic data as a way to be on the correct side of your bet then you do of course have an edge. I just think for day trading purposes it over complicates things. This strategy seems to be something that traders would use for a longer time frame. Thanks for sharing. I do hope that one day it clicks for me and I see the magic in what you have written, and it could just very well be that I am too uninformed to appreciate it all now so I do apologize in advance if my opinion is flawed.