Four Methods For Trading Exchange Traded Funds In Your Portfolio

ETF Profit Driver is a comprehensive trading course the reveals four specific strategies to safely trade Exchange Traded Funds.
Bill Poulos has released the ETF Profit Driver course to assist individual investors and traders to incorporate Exchange Traded Funds products into their investment portfolio. The course is professionally presented, utilizing cutting edge educational software. Students are shown four methods to enter the market at times when the probability of profitability is high, then implement a money management plan to reduce risk and take profits at appropriate times.

Exchange Traded Funds offer investors and traders many advantages over both individual stocks as well as traditional mutual funds. Because Exchange Traded Funds are "baskets" of stocks, they provide the investor with immediate diversification that is not afforded by stock in a single company. With that diversification come a reduction in risk.

Mutual funds also provide diversification through their ownership of multiple stocks. They are not exchange traded, however. This means that your buy and sell orders will not be filled until sometime after the markets have closed. Exchange Traded Funds are traded on exchanges, so you are able to open and close positions during market hours allowing you to make effective use of stop and limit orders.

Bill Poulos has developed four highly selective methods for identifying Exchange Traded Funds and the best time to place a trade. ETF Profit Driver is designed to only pursue the best trade setups, so you should not expect a large number of buy signals but when they do occur you should expect to see a profitable trade more often than not.

Each of the four trading methods is designed to trade the market in concert with a developing or existing upward trend. Short selling is not part of this method, although you are able to "get short" the market through the use of negatively correlated Exchange Traded Funds. A negatively correlated Exchange Traded Fund is one that moves opposite the market, so when the market is in a downward trend one of these "short" Exchange Traded Funds will rise in value.

Once you understand the nature of market trends, you will have an appreciation for each of the four trading methods incorporated into ETF Profit Driver. The first method attempts to identify and jump aboard a newly developing trend when it first breaks out. Other methods look for safe points in the market to buy Exchange Traded Fund while it is in the trend and when it has corrected following a correction.

Money management is a critical aspect for all investors and traders, although most in the retail sector do not incorporate it into their own strategies. With ETF Profit Driver, Bill Poulos has incorporated very effective methods for not only buying Exchange Traded Funds but for also selling the positions when necessary to avoid losses and to take profits at appropriate times. As such, it is a complete Exchange Traded Funds trading course.

Discover the 4 Trading Method Developed by Bill Poulos in our comprehensive Review of the ETF Profit Driver course.
   By Christopher Smith
Published: 4/5/2008
 
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