📈 Elevate Your Trading Game with Every Card!
The Stock Market Flash Cards from Wall Street Merch feature 103 meticulously designed cards that help new investors learn and memorize key candlestick patterns, understand market behavior, and make data-driven trading decisions. Perfect for adults looking to enhance their trading skills without the hassle of assembly or batteries.
Age range (description) | Adult |
Number of pieces | 103 |
School type | Elementary School |
Product dimensions | 17.8L x 14.2W centimetres |
UPC | 195893066926 |
Manufacturer recommended age | 18 years and up |
Item model number | S579WJ-S579BMS |
Assembly Required | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
Batteries included? | No |
Material Type(s) | Paper |
ASIN | B09CYR4N51 |
M**N
Good product
Liked the product and the price
O**W
These cards sets are always incomplete
Almost all of the candlestick flash card sets are lacking in that they appear to ignore the open or hollow candlestick. The open and close for a hollow candle stick is the reverse of the solid and has important implications for the state of trading for time frame represented.
C**E
Not worth the price at all
Doesn’t learn anything, the pattern have been created for the purpose of the product in order for it to look bigger.Doesn’t recommend
H**A
If you need to know about candle sticks…
This is the game to learn very fun
Z**Y
It has potential, but a little confusing
I like the idea of this product, but right off the bat, the information is conflicting. From the photo that I attached you can see that both cards are 'theoretical bullish reversals," but in the squares surrounding the "actual bull market," & "actual bear market," it doesn't always line up with the theory. I'm not sure if they're trying to say "even though the theory is a bullish reversal, it tends to be a bearish continuation this percentage of the time.Other pieces of it need to be cleaned up too. In that example of the "unique three river bottom," the wording says "the final day is a short green candle with a lower low. A low in candlesticks is the 'shadow', not the close or the open. In the image, the lower is not lower than the day before, and it doesn't specify if the low of the third day was meant to be lower than the first day's low.It's very messy and unorganized. The idea is great and I love studying them and then Youtube the ideas of them to actually understand it better, but the language has to be ubiquitous all around & be in line with the actual verbiage used in the stock market (open, close, low, high, etc).
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 days ago