Browse Articles by Alan Farley



Getting An Edge With Cross-Market Analysis

Alan Farley - June 29, 2001
Chart readers fall into two distinct categories when it comes to cross-market analysis. The first group focuses solely on the individual price chart because it believes that all market influences lie hidden in the candlesticks of that single view. The second group doesn't have quite so much faith in simple price patterns. Read More >>

Getting An Edge With Cross-Market Analysis

Alan Farley - June 29, 2001
Chart readers fall into two distinct categories when it comes to cross-market analysis. The first group focuses solely on the individual price chart because it believes that all market influences lie hidden in the candlesticks of that single view. The second group doesn't have quite so much faith in simple price patterns. Read More >>

Getting An Edge With Cross-Market Analysis

Alan Farley - June 29, 2001
Chart readers fall into two distinct categories when it comes to cross-market analysis. The first group focuses solely on the individual price chart because it believes that all market influences lie hidden in the candlesticks of that single view. The second group doesn't have quite so much faith in simple price patterns. Read More >>

Getting An Edge With Cross-Market Analysis

Alan Farley - June 29, 2001
Chart readers fall into two distinct categories when it comes to cross-market analysis. The first group focuses solely on the individual price chart because it believes that all market influences lie hidden in the candlesticks of that single view. The second group doesn't have quite so much faith in simple price patterns. Read More >>

Getting An Edge With Cross-Market Analysis

Alan Farley - June 29, 2001
Chart readers fall into two distinct categories when it comes to cross-market analysis. The first group focuses solely on the individual price chart because it believes that all market influences lie hidden in the candlesticks of that single view. The second group doesn't have quite so much faith in simple price patterns. Read More >>

Getting An Edge With Cross-Market Analysis

Alan Farley - June 29, 2001
Chart readers fall into two distinct categories when it comes to cross-market analysis. The first group focuses solely on the individual price chart because it believes that all market influences lie hidden in the candlesticks of that single view. The second group doesn't have quite so much faith in simple price patterns. Read More >>

Working Capital

Alan Farley - June 14, 2001
Welcome to the school of what works. With the markets caught in their endless wiggle-waggle, you might assume there are less ways to make a buck now than in the past. Read More >>

Fun And Games

Alan Farley - June 07, 2001
Bear markets produce unexpected winners and losers. Of course, the losers are a lot more obvious than those few issues or sectors that Read More >>

The Next Leg Down

Alan Farley - May 31, 2001
Sideways price action can dull our instincts to the point that we fail to notice when conditions are about to change. Mounting evidence suggests Read More >>

Time-Frame Traps

Alan Farley - May 24, 2001
CKP
Do you analyze your trade setups in one time frame, but make your buying and selling decisions in another? This "trend relativity error" can empty your trading account with great precision. Read More >>