TimelessMarket Theory
The Reading List · Book breakdown

Secrets for Profiting in Bull and Bear Markets

Stan Weinstein · 1988 · Stage analysis — the simplest serious map of a stock's life cycle.

The author. Stan Weinstein — editor of The Professional Tape Reader, whose four-stage model became the shared mental map of a generation of trend traders (Minervini and many modern swing traders cite it directly).

Overview — in one paragraph

Weinstein's claim is that every stock, in every era, cycles through the same four stages: a basing area (1), an advancing uptrend (2), a topping distribution (3), and a declining downtrend (4). One weekly chart, one 30-week moving average, and relative strength are enough to tell which stage you're looking at. The entire method follows: only ever buy stage 2, ideally the moment it begins — and never, under any circumstance, hold or buy stage 4.

The framework — what the book actually teaches

How traders actually use it

Read it well

  • Practice stage-labeling a hundred weekly charts — the skill is classification, and it builds fast.
  • Use the sell rules symmetrically: stage 3 is for exits, whatever your entry story was.
  • Keep the weekly timeframe — the model was built for it, and it filters noise for free.

Read it badly

  • Forcing stage labels onto intraday charts where the model wasn't designed to live.
  • Buying stage-1 bases early "to be ahead" — the method's whole point is paying up for confirmation.
  • Ignoring the short-selling half; stage 4 is a position, not just a warning.

Where it fits on the reading path

The most accessible complete trend method in print. If Murphy's textbook is the encyclopedia, this is the field guide — many readers get more usable structure from Weinstein than anywhere else. It slots directly before O'Neil and Minervini, who add fundamentals and precision to the same skeleton. Who it's for: swing and position traders; also the cleanest first "method book" for a newer trader.

Honest assessment

Strengths: a genuinely simple model that survives contact with real charts; clear rules for both sides of the market; the stage vocabulary alone improves any trader's thinking.

Limits: stages are obvious in hindsight and fuzzy at the edges in real time (stage 1→2 transitions fail often); the 1980s examples predate decimalization and algorithmic churn; and no expectancy data is offered — the model organizes trends, the trader still supplies the risk discipline via position sizing.

The authorStan Weinstein — full profile, method & sources
StrategyStage-2 breakout — full playbook
Concepts it opensTrends, Moving averages, Relative strength
Read nextHow to Make Money in StocksTrade Like a Stock Market Wizard

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