Description
Richard Wyckoff’s Case History of the New York Times Average of 50 Stocks in 1930-31. Dr. Gary details the teaching of Richard Wyckoff – In this segment of market history, Richard Wyckoff breaks down his method of reading the market bar-bay-bar in rich detail. This original work by Wyckoff has remained untouched and unaltered in the Wyckoff course. It is, as David Weiss had said, “a profound study in how to really read the market.” David said that this case history significantly changed his trading. When I (Gary) studied this, I realized this was the way to view and understand the workings of the markets.
Although this case history was written nearly 100 years ago, it continues to be as relevant and as fresh as the day it was first written. Technologies can change quickly, sometimes causing revolutions in the way we do or think about things. We’ve all experienced this with computers, the internet and now AI. Human nature, on the other hand, changes very slowly. Humans evolve over thousands of years. Today’s traders have similar thoughts, feelings, aspirations, goals, desires, and experiences as those traders had 100 years ago, and the Wyckoff study reflects this. If you want to truly understand how the markets work and if you want to read the market as it is trading in real time, the Wyckoff case history is the perfect place to start.
Dr. Gary’s in depth review and teaching of Wyckoff case history of the NYT Average of 50 stocks in 1030-31 has 4 recordings, each is over 1 hour long.
This is part of the Ultimate Wyckoff Teaching Series, which include
- Richard Wyckoff’s Case History of the New York Time Average of 50 Stocks in 1930-31
- David Weis’s book: Trades About to Happen
- David Weis’s 2 chapters on bond futures in the book: Chartng the Market: the Wyckoff Method
- Tom Williams’s book: The Undeclared Secrets that Drive the Stock Market


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