101 Ways to Pick Stock Market Winners

101 Ways to Pick Stock Market Winners

by Clem Chambers (Author)

Synopsis

The unputdownable insider's guide! Clem Chambers is one of the world's leading authorities on market performance. His website is hugely successful with investors in the UK and around the world, particularly in South America. In order to maintain his own business at the peak of its performance, Clem trades in stocks in his own personal account. If I can't do it myself, he says with characteristic frankness, then how am I supposed to help other people? That he does so regularly and profitably demonstrates both his skill and his knowledge. Now he's prepared to share his secrets of stock market success. Writing with first-hand knowledge, he provides 101 pithy and personally researched tips which help day traders, investors and stock pickers of every kind to focus in on what characterises a potentially successful stock. Incisive, brutally honest and occasionally very funny, 101 Ways to Pick Stock Market Winners is an invaluable manual for anyone wanting to make money out of the markets.

$23.95

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 184
Edition: 2nd
Publisher: Harriman House
Published: 25 Jan 2013

ISBN 10: 0857192760
ISBN 13: 9780857192769

Author Bio
Clem Chambers is CEO of ADVFN, Europe's leading stocks and investment website. He became CEO of ADVFN in January of 2002 and is credited with steering the company from likely dot.com failure to thriving market leader. Internet bible, Wired Magazine, for which he regularly contributes, described him as a 'Market Maven'. He is also a member of their renowned 'Brains Trust.' Clem wrote a stock column in Wired from 2000 to 2001 in a period spanning the final boom and following bust. He is a columnist for The Business, The Scotsman, Traders' and Inside Edge and is a regular contributor to a number of UK and US financial publications including Investors Chronicle, Stocks & Commodities and Futures. He is a regular commentator on CNBC, the BBC and numerous US financial radio stations.