Trading with Intermarket Analysis
A Visual Approach to Beating the Financial Markets Using Exchange-Traded Funds
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4.7 • 3 Ratings
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- $59.99
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- $59.99
Publisher Description
A visual guide to market trading using intermarket analysis and exchange-traded funds
With global markets and asset classes growing even more interconnected, intermarket analysis—the analysis of related asset classes or financial markets to determine their strengths and weaknesses—has become an essential part of any trader's due diligence. In Trading with Intermarket Analysis, John J. Murphy, former technical analyst for CNBC, lays out the technical and intermarket tools needed to understand global markets and illustrates how they help traders profit in volatile climates using exchange-traded funds.
Armed with a knowledge of how economic forces impact various markets and financial sectors, investors and traders can profit by exploiting opportunities in markets about to rise and avoiding those poised to fall. Trading with Intermarket Analysis provides advice on trend following, chart patterns, moving averages, oscillators, spotting tops and bottoms, using exchange-traded funds, tracking market sectors, and the new world of intermarket relationships, all presented in a highly visual way.
Gives readers a visually rich introduction to the world of intermarket analysis, the ultimate tool for beating the markets Provides practical advice on trend following, chart patterns, moving averages, oscillators, spotting tops and bottoms, using exchange-traded funds, tracking market sectors, and intermarket relationships Includes appendices on Japanese candlesticks and point-and-figure charting
Comprehensive and easy-to-use, Trading with Intermarket Analysis presents the most important concepts related to using exchange-traded funds to beat the markets in a visually accessible format.
Customer Reviews
Interesting Read . . .
This book has some useful tips on applying intermarket analysis and then using ETFs to take advantage of the trends you spot. It is too heavy on chart narration (“then in 2012 the instrument bottoms again and begins to rise . . “) and too light on explanation of causal relationships. It is also misleading in the fact that relationships of the 2010s are presented as the new intermarket relationship rules but really they were just a different set of them due to the fact deflation concerns were at the forefront. It might have been better to organize intermarket relationships into deflationary or inflationary structures. I plan on taking notes from the book and organizing them into such structures. That should be a solid resource for me as I continue my trading journey.