
Advanced Techniques in Day Trading
A Practical Guide to High Probability Strategies and Methods
by Andrew Aziz
Reading Profile
Should I read this?
Andrew Aziz lays out a practical training regimen that begins with tools—scanners, software, platforms—and moves into concrete tips for finding tradable stocks, defining support/resistance, and managing trades under pressure. The strength is in step-by-step operational advice and checklist-style recommendations for active intraday work. The limitation is a strong tactical focus: readers seeking macro perspectives, theory-heavy explanations, or a gentle, narrative-led introduction will find it narrow and occasionally repetitive in trade examples.
Read this if...
- •a novice day trader switching from simulated to live trading who needs concrete setup checklists and platform guidance to reduce execution mistakes in real-time
- •a junior prop-trading analyst tasked with standardizing intraday screening and entry/exit rules across a small desk and wants a practical reference to align procedures
- •a part-time trader trying to compress learning into targeted sessions — wants tool recommendations and concrete trade-management rules to apply between a day job and market hours
Skip this if...
- •you'll likely put it down when chapters become long platform-setup walkthroughs or repeated trade examples — that setup-phase can feel like a technical slog
- •annoying if you prefer big-picture market context, behavioral finance, or philosophy of risk rather than tactical, minute-by-minute execution advice
- •not for readers wanting step-by-step workbook exercises or interactive drills — this is instructional prose and practical tips rather than hands-on exercises
This wellthoughtout training regimen begins with an indepth look at the necessary tools of the trade including your scanner, software and platform; and then moves to practical advice on subjects such as how to find the right stocks to trade, how to define support and resistance levels, and how to best manage your trades in the stress of the mome...
Before You Buy
Reading Specifications
Difficulty:hard
Audience Fit
- a novice day trader switching from simulated to live trading who needs concrete setup checklists and platform guidance to reduce execution mistakes in real-time
- a junior prop-trading analyst tasked with standardizing intraday screening and entry/exit rules across a small desk and wants a practical reference to align procedures
- a part-time trader trying to compress learning into targeted sessions — wants tool recommendations and concrete trade-management rules to apply between a day job and market hours
- you'll likely put it down when chapters become long platform-setup walkthroughs or repeated trade examples — that setup-phase can feel like a technical slog
- annoying if you prefer big-picture market context, behavioral finance, or philosophy of risk rather than tactical, minute-by-minute execution advice
- not for readers wanting step-by-step workbook exercises or interactive drills — this is instructional prose and practical tips rather than hands-on exercises
Check formats, pricing, and availability options for Kindle, physical print, or audiobooks directly.
View available editions on AmazonKey themes
Why recommended
appears in Day Trading, Finance, and Nonfiction.
Recommendation Signals
Recommendation proof is sourced from public posts, interviews, reading lists, and cited references.
No verified recommendation proof available yet.
Appears In
Not sure if this is the right fit?
Consider The Undoing Project by Michael Lewis. Recommended by 18 sources.
“Michael Lewis chronicles the friendship and intellectual partnership of Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, who championed the idea that cognitive biases shape our choices. The narrative reads like a buddy story, weaving their discoveries into personal anecdotes and the drama of their collaboration. You'll grasp key ideas—loss aversion, framing—through their story, but the book focuses on biography, not application. Helpful for understanding behavioral economics' origins; less useful if you want actionable advice. The emotional arc of their relationship can overshadow the science.”
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Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.
