Biography
Michael N. Kahn, who holds a Chartered Market Technician designation, has been working with charts and technical analysis since 1986 and currently writes the weekly 'Getting Technical' column for Barron's Online. He was formerly Chief Technical Analyst for BridgeNews and a regular on such financial programs as PBS' Nightly Business Report, Yahoo Finance Vision and WebFN. He has written three books on technical analysis, most recently "A Beginner's Guide to Charting the Financial Markets,' and has appeared frequently as an instructor on online schools such as BloombergUniversity.com and WebStreetUniversity.com. Kahn has also served as Director of Marketing for the Market Technicians Association.
Source: [About the Author](https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B001JRVAS4/about)
Source: [About the Author](https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B001JRVAS4/about)
Books by Michael N. Kahn
Technische Analyse
Technische Analyse
Chart patterns
Explosions and corrections in
Explosions and corrections in Investment charts patterns
Fundamental Market Analysis Really Is Technical
How time matters to the market
How time matters to the market
Investment chart patterns
Investment chart patterns
Investment charts and concepts
Investment charts and concepts
Sentiment market analysis
Sentiment market analysis
The trend is your friend
The trend is your friend
A beginner's guide to charting financial markets
Technical Analysis Plain & Simple
Building Your Investment Techn
Building Your Investment Technical Toolbox
How Do Traders and Investors Use Charts with Technical Analysis?
Is Technical Analysis for Inve
Is Technical Analysis for Investors Really All Technical?
Market Analysis Isn't Brain Su
Market Analysis Isn't Brain Surgery
Market Indicators Other Than P
Market Indicators Other Than Price
Market Sectors and Industry Gr
Market Sectors and Industry Groups
Market Themes and Variations
Market Themes and Variations
Market Volume
Risk Versus Reward
See the Investment Forest and
See the Investment Forest and the Trees
The Basics of How Technical Analysis Works for Investors
What Makes a Stock (Bond, Commodity) Look Good?