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Walter Bressert
Walter Bressert Inc.
http://www.walterbressert.com
Cycles in the
DJIA and on Gold mta presentation

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presentation file with MP3 audio $2.99
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Biography,
Walter, who is credited with
bringing cycles into the futures markets, became interested in
cycles in the late 1960s. He studied everything available at the
time, including volumes of information published by the Foundation
for the Study of Cycles, and Jim Hurst's classic book on cycles,
"The Profit Magic of Stock Transaction Timing". He also attended
several of Jim's workshops. Walter was a trader, and in applying the
concepts from Hurst's book and workshops, and the Foundation, he
realized that something was missing. There was plenty of theory on
how to use cycles, but no quantification, or structure, that would
allow him to trade the markets cyclically with confidence.
He researched the historical performance of the markets, focusing on
quantifying the cycles and combining cycles with price performance,
including Fibonnaci relationships of time and price. He studied the
works of Edwards and Magee, W.D. Gann, Gartley and R.N. Elliott,
blending the timing of cycles with the best of the works of others
who had studied the market in-depth. It was at this time Walter
began using a combination of oscillators and Timing Bands, which
compensates for the tendency of cycles to contract and extend. The
result of his extensive research was the Bressert Method of Cycle
Analysis. Much of the terminology used by cycle analysts today
originates with the terminology Walter used to describe cyclic
activity for specific cycles that he isolated over 25 years ago.
This method, greatly improved by the addition of Oscillator/Cycle
Combinations, is still traded today by many who learned it in the
70s and 80s.
In 1974, he began publishing the HAL Commodity Cycles newsletter to
make this information available to other traders. Focusing on the
futures markets, HAL quickly grew to become one of the largest and
most popular newsletters in the business. As Futures magazine stated
- "He gets the readership he deserves because he is right so often".
In 1976, at the request of his subscribers, he began teaching
workshops on trading cycles using the Bressert Method. Over the
years he has taught thousands of commodity traders, brokers and
money managers in the U.S., Europe and Asia how to use cycles to
improve their timing.
Walter had been working with oscillators for many years before he
joined with Tim Slater in 1979 to build CompuTrac, the first
computerized market analysis program available to the public.
After publishing HAL Commodity Cycles for 12 years, of which 10 of
the 12 years were profitable, he retired in 1985. In 1990, he saw
the need for a book on combining oscillators and cycles, and
published "The Power of Oscillator/Cycle Combinations" in 1991.
(This book is now outdated with the advent of computerized
analysis.)
From 1991 through 1995, he published the CycleWatch newsletter,
which forecast time and price moves weeks and months into the future
in the S&P Index, Bonds, Precious Metals, Currencies and the
Agricultural markets. CycleWatch was available as a daily
fax-on-demand, and via DBC Signal, FutureLink and DTN. Walter's
trading recommendations were also featured on the Futures magazine
AllStar Advisor's Hotline.
In 1994, Walter developed award-winning software that over the years
has evolved into his current software ProfitTrader. Based on his
timing methodology, ProfitTrader identifies trend and trend
reversals, plus generates mechanical BUY/SELL signals. Today, as
editor and publisher of the WB Intraday Review & Forecaster and WB
Trades OnLine, he provides daily commentary and trade
recommendations on the S&P 500. His recommendations and forecasts
are instructional so traders can learn the "how and why" to make
their own trading decisions.
The Timing Bands he built for the markets in the early 70s are still
valid and much improved. The addition of oscillators and his
techniques to enhance oscillator performance greatly improve the
ability of anyone - beginner or expert - to trade tops and bottoms
of cycles as they are occurring . The real key to trading with
cycles is to first identify trend direction, then buy bottoms if the
trend is up, and sell tops if the trend is down. The interaction of
cycles within cycles shows specific patterns that help identify
trend reversals as they are occurring, and in iday trading it is
these trend reversals that are often followed by the big intraday
moves.
Walter was a director and president of the non-profit Foundation for
the Study of Cycles. He has lectured internationally for more than
twenty years and written articles for the Wall Street Journal,
Barron's, Futures magazine and the "Commodity Research Bureau
Yearbook". He was a contributing editor to the Financial News
Network and has appeared on CNBC from time-to-time as a guest
speaker.
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