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Steve Bigalow
www.candlestickforum.com
Combining Candlestick Signals with
Technical Indicators

Description: Steve will explain how to develop a trading plan by
incorporating indicators such as stochastics, moving averages,
Fibonacci numbers or trend lines into candlestick analysis.
Downloadable PDF presentation file with MP3 audio $2.99
(You must manually change pdf pages with the audio presentation)

Biography
When Steve Bigalow
first started using candlestick analysis in the late 80’s, his
trading was decidedly low-tech. He would call in his orders from a
phone tied to the dashboard of his truck while driving to real
estate renovation projects.
Fast forward twenty years. Bigalow long ago traded in the pick-up
for a Mercedes SL500, and he has no time for house rehabbing
anymore. He is now considered one of the top candlestick experts in
the country. Along with luminaries like Steve Nissin and Greg
Morris, he is among a select group of teachers who helped bring the
400-year-old Japanese art to mainstream acceptance in the U.S. He
consults regularly with money managers on how to apply candlesticks
to their fundamental research and trading. Bigalow’s accomplishments
have been great but not easy.
“I pretty much had to figure it out for myself,” Bigalow says,
“because when I started there wasn’t a whole lot of information
around at that time. In the early to mid 90’s a few books came out,
which I was excited to see, but when I read them, they weren’t
anything more than I already knew. They didn’t show you how to trade
with candlesticks successfully.
“So that’s why I wrote my first book, ( Profitable Candlestick
Trading: Pinpointing Market Opportunities to Maximize Profits , John
Wiley & Sons, 2001) to take all the information that was out there
on candlestick investing and consolidate it into what you really
needed to know to make a successful trading plan.”
Like a bar chart, a candlestick line depicts the open, high, low and
close. The body of the stick represents the range between the open
and close. When the body is hollow, the close was higher than the
open; when the body is filled in, the close was lower than the open.
Shadows, the thin lines above and below the body, represent the high
and low of the day's trading range.
“The boxes have quite a bit of information built into them to tell
you when a reversal is going on in a trend” Steve notes. He believes
traders can build successful strategies by combining candlestick
analysis with indicators such as stochastics, moving averages,
Fibonacci numbers or trend lines.
Candlesticks were first brought to Bigalow’s attention by a friend
who wanted to tap into Steve’s experience as a former stockbroker.
“I didn’t do anything real aggressive with it for two or three
months, but it kept bugging me to look at it,” Bigalow says. “Within
that first year of study I started trading my commodity account
based off of candlesticks, and while I did a lot better than I had
been doing, it was a learning process. It took a lot of hard knocks
to fight through the emotions of trading and learn the necessary
discipline.”
Bigalow followed the first book with High Profit Candlestick
Patterns: Turning Investor Sentiment into High Profits (Profit
Publishing, 2005). He developed a trading resource web site at
www.candlestickforum.com that provides tools for beginning through
advanced chartists.
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