Joe Corona – Professional Options Trading College
Joe Corona will provide you the knowledge to find and execute options strategies, which have the biggest potential edge each trading day. You will not find most, (if any) of the TMOC strategies in any book or any other options course we are aware of. He will teach you to trade systems taught in The Tradingmarkets Swing Trading College which Joe says are among the best he has seen. He will teach you how to take a handful of these strategies and trade options with them in both equities and indices.
You will learn many of the same strategies that Joe used to make a living trading for the past 23 years. These are low-risk options trades and Joe’s best strategies.
Trading markets Options Trading College (TMOC) covers:
1. Previously unpublished research, which combines price, direction, and volatility
2. Strategies to trade earnings reports and seasonal spreads, which have led to some of his biggest gains
3. The Magnetic Strike Price Strategy
4. A Low Risk/High Reward Proprietary Straddle Strategy
5. Information on how to construct your options business
6. Joe’s proprietary “Volatility And Price Playbook” in order for you to trade OEX options and QQQQ options. This playbook has never been made available before.”
7. Proprietary RSI Strategies
8. Education on Adjusting Trades
What will receive for this Tradingmarkets Options Trading College (TMOC) with Joe Corona Mentoring?
– 16 Weeks of Video coaching with over 25 hours of videos conference
– 16 Weeks pdf manual
– MS Excel files and MS word files
Technical Analysis Trading Market Courses
How to understand technical analysis: Learn about technical analysis
In finance, technical analysis is an analysis methodology for forecasting the direction of prices through the study of past market data, primarily price and volume.
Behavioral economics and quantitative analysis use many of the same tools of technical analysis, which,
being an aspect of active management stands in contradiction to much of modern portfolio theory.
The efficacy of both technical and fundamental analysis is disputed by the efficient-market hypothesis, which states that stock market prices are essentially unpredictable.