Choose a volume number for more information. Our Book Volumes are compilations of all the past years’ articles and interviews bound into reference book form.
Technical Analysis of STOCKS & COMMODITIES, The Traders’ Magazine, is all about using charts and computer applications that help you profit in today’s markets. It teaches serious investors like you how to improve your trades in stocks, bonds, options, mutual funds and futures. Become a regular reader and you’ll learn about charting, computerized trading applications, case studies, system development, profit taking, trade timing, and many more proven and innovative techniques.
Are you new to S&C? Then you’ll want to order one or more of these collections of articles.
Have you been a subscriber for years? Then you’ll appreciate the convenience of having all this information in a handy, indexed book. You’ll never have to paw through a pile of old magazines again.
    VOLUME 1 — SOLD OUT
 Including information on when to
      enter and when to exit a market.
 1982–83, 192 pages
    VOLUME 5
 Including techniques for interpreting the market
      to identify takeover candidates.
 1987, 392 pages
    VOLUME 8
 A series of articles on the basics of technical
      analysis — plus experts like Richards Arms.
 1990, 608 pages
    VOLUME 9 — SOLD OUT
 Interviews with the experts...
      and page after page of tested trading techniques.
 1991, 608 pages
    VOLUME 10
 Trading bands, intermarket analysis and risk
      management... all explained by the innovators.
 1992, 667 pages
    VOLUME 12
 First-hand revelations about the most respected
      tools of technical analysis by the people who made them famous.
 1994, 686
      pages
    VOLUME 15
 It’s like getting an advanced degree
      in trading — without actually having to go to class.
 1997, 720 pages
    VOLUME 17
 Choose the methods that satisfy your requirements
      for an investment tool, and get to work.
 1999, 704 pages
    CHARTING THE STOCK MARKET: 
      THE WYCKOFF METHOD
      A modern
      look at a seminal way to use technical analysis: the Wyckoff method.