How to Make Money in Commodities
i
HOW TO MAKE MONEY IN COMMODITIES:
The Successful Method For Today's Markets
by
Bruce G. Gould
ii
Second Edition, Revised.
© Copyright 1977, 1980, 1981, 1982 by Bruce G. Gould. All rights
reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form
without permission in writing, except by a reviewer quoting
brief passages for inclusion in a newspaper or magazine.
Additional copies available from BRUCE GOULD PUBLICATIONS,
P.O. Box 16, Seattle, WA 98111.
(ISBN 0-918706-05-9)
iii & iv
(Intentionally blank)
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CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgements
- Section One:
- Definitions and Basic Principles
-
- Section Two:
- The Method and the Markets
- Section Three:
- The Future is Now: Profits for the 21st Century
-
- Appendix
- I. Estimated Value of Commodities Traded
II. Volume of Trading In Futures
III. Contract Market Designations
IV. Futures Facts
V. Government Reports
Glossary
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(Intentionally blank)
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PREFACE
The business
of commodity futures trading grew spectacularly throughout
the 1970s and into the present decade. The value
of commodities traded on the futures exchanges zoomed past
the $2.5 trillion mark, dwarfing similar statistics
for the New York Stock Exchange. The volume of trading in commodity
futures set new records every single year from
1969-1980, racking up a 700 percent increase to nearly 80 million
contracts (the
unit bought or sold in futures trading). Clearly, thousands
of investors had discovered the enormous profit opportunities
in soybeans, wheat, gold, cotton, sugar, Treasury Bills, hogs
and cattle. In fact, most of the 40 major commodities traded
on the U.S. exchanges offered at some time returns of 100 percent
or more on initial capital. Many, as this book will detail,
brought astonishing profits of 3,000 or 4,000 percent of
the original outlay.
As is evident from the many actual case histories this book
will examine, such profits are not unusual in commodities,
nor are they reserved for an elite group of professionals.
They occur frequently, and can be had by any trader with
the method for spotting a certain kind of trend and properly
capitalizing
on it. The tremendous growth of the futures industry testifies
to the fact that many average investors have found trading
in commodity futures easier, more exciting, and more lucrative
than investment in stocks, bonds, or other conventional instruments.
These latter are essential to any sound investment program,
but none can bring the returns, personal and financial, of
futures trading. Unfortunately, many who flocked to the commodity
markets suffered ruinous losses. These might have been avoided
by
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the disciplined use of a single, simple approach
to profiting through price changes.
This book
is not a complete guide to futures trading
(a task I have attempted elsewhere). It is instead a brief
introduction,
and a handbook for developing one successful trading method.
Commodity futures trading has been my life for the past 15
years. I began trading futures contracts while still a student
in law school. Since then I have never ceased following the
markets, for commodity profits are indeed gratifying. My career
as a trader has convinced me that futures trading is a practical
alternative for people from all walks of life - farmers, retailers,
professionals, homemakers - who seek to increase their earnings.
Commodity
futures trading has been shrouded in a darkness of misinformation
until quite recently. Many still believe
it to be a hopelessly complicated and dangerous enterprise.
I have tried to fill that information gap in my best sellingDow
Jones-Irwin Guide To Commodities Trading, and
to give concrete answers to traders' questions in my Commodity
Trading Manual and in a bi-weekly newsletter, "Bruce
Gould on Commodities." But
my regular correspondence with traders - from beginners to
seasoned professionals - still brings one insistent question: "Bruce,
what really is the most successful technique you have developed
for making money in the futures markets?" In the last
15 years I have tested a score of systems, and researched dozens
more. My own time and money were spent in these efforts, testing
different market strategies with my own risk capital. Out of
these efforts came the answer to the question so many keep
asking. This book presents that answer in a case-by-case review
of actual price moves in the recent past that offered stunning
profits when traded with the method you are about to learn.
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This revelation should have two major effects. First, a great
number of people should make a large sum of money as a result
of carefully reading the following pages. You may well be one
of them, and I hope that you are. Second, my answer to the
posed question will undoubtedly upset a small group of professional "insiders" who
have kept the secrets of successful trading to themselves in
the past, and who would like to keep making money from the
ignorance of the investing public. This book and my other writings
are designed to change that situation forever.
You will probably be amazed by what you are about to learn.
You may even be frightened. Certainly you will be suspicious
and unbelieving at first (as you should be concerning any investment
opportunity). But the argument is a true one, and the facts
speak for themselves. It is possible to make profits in the
commodity futures markets running from 100 percent to 500 percent
to more than 5,000 percent in a matter of weeks or months,
and with an initial risk capital outlay of as little as $5,000.
I have done it, and it is being done today on a regular
basis by many traders. In small towns and big cities, on farms and
in offices, traders with no expertise in crop forecasting or
hog?corn ratios are making very healthy fortunes by patiently
applying a simple approach to the movements of the markets.
Upon completion
of these pages, however, I
do not suggest
that you borrow money from the bank or cash in your life insurance
policy in order to get started in commodities. Remember, the
vast majority of traders lose money, mostly because of greed,
impatience, and a lack of common sense. Many rush haphazardly
into markets, trading fast and furious on the basis of rumors
and intuitions, or according to some high-priced and "sure
fire" system. The commission costs alone on all these
trades are often enough to break the novice
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trader. I urge you to start very slowly. Commit only a small
amount of money that you can comfortably afford to risk. Better
yet, begin by trading only "on paper," keeping your
money in the bank while conducting your paper trading exactly
as if it were the real thing. Get a feel for how to spot a profitable
trading opportunity, and develop the timing essential for getting
in and out of your positions with maximum efficiency. Once you've
mastered the technique on paper, and are showing consistent net
profits, you are ready to join the ranks of the winning speculators.
Good reading and good luck!
| Bruce Gould
Seattle, Washington
|
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
First, I would like to thank the thousands who made the first
edition of this book such a gratifying success. Their letters
and comments have made a valuable contribution to my further
studies of the futures markets, and deepened immeasurably my
understanding of the average trader's needs.
I would like to dedicate this book to several very important
people in my life, Fred, Doreen and Peter Pomeroy, David and
Jan Gould, Harvey and Sally Cupaiuloi, Christine McComb, and
the most wonderful mother a son could have, Grace Elizabeth
Gould.
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Note: All commodity price charts reproduced in this book
are courtesy of the Commodity Research Bureau, Inc., 1 Liberty
Plaza, New York, New York 10006.
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