Hello Gerard.

Got em, thanks.

Love the trade talk, the generosity and the humour.
I wouldn't have gone there by myself, thanks for taking me on a 
journey.

Agreed that putting the talk up in separate files is the way to go.

It's interesting that you received such a big response.


Some random comments:

I also have an affinity for the purity of Dow theory.
I added a slight personal touch to the definition.

"The price at all times reflects the total sum of the opinion of all 
market participants who are prepared to stake their money on it".

That is a pretty honest and powerful opinion, don't you think?

I changed from knowledge to opinion because knowledge doesn't reflect 
the reality of the psyche and the role the emotions (fear and greed) 
play. The definition of players as payers excludes the talking heads 
et al.

I like the approach of overlaying LT/MT and ST in one view.
I like momentum as a key measure.
I like the idea that TA indicators are more reliable on indexes than 
individual stocks (indexes are inherently smoothed indicators?).
I'm still doing backflips over ATC after 9 months.

Go Tomasz!

BrianB2.



--- In [email protected], "Gerard Carey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> Done.
> Three Dow Wave word documents.
> Nuiscance that attachment business.
> I'm a webmailer and keep a separate email address for ALL group 
> posts. I intially read the Yahoo Group page then if any attachments 
> are of interest I go to the other address to access them. Clean it 
> out every few days. Never hit the limit in a couple of years use. 
> Regds
> Gerard
>  
> 
> --- In [email protected], "brian.z123" <brian.z123@> wrote:
> >
> > Hello Gerard,
> > 
> > Any chance of uploading it to the group files for a few days so I 
> can 
> > look at it?
> > 
> > Webmailers don't get the attachments.
> > 
> > BrianB2.
> > 
> > --- In [email protected], "Gerard Carey" <gcfinance@> 
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > For those interested in the indicator, Mr Dow gives us here, 
just 
> a
> > > slightly different slant on how to view the market (and our 
> > indicator).
> > > 
> > > Charles Dow, in the "Wall Street Journal", January 31, 1901: 
> > > "A person watching the tide coming in and who wishes to know 
the 
> > spot
> > > which marks the high tide, sets a stick in the sand at the 
points
> > > reached by the incoming waves..........
> > > 
> > > Again I've put the guff on an attachment to spare the 
> uninterested.
> > > 
> > > Regds and good trading
> > > Gerard
> > > 
> > > -- 
> > > http://www.fastmail.fm - I mean, what is it about a decent 
email 
> > service?
> > >
> >
>


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