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A veteran hockey writer takes on hockey culture and the NHL--addressing the games most controversial issue Whether its on-ice fist fights or head shots into the glass, hockey has become a nightly news spectacle--with players pummeling and bashing each other across the ice like drunken gladiators. And while the NHL may actually condone on-ice violence as a ticket draw, diehard hockey fan and expert Adam Proteau argues against hockeys transformation into a thuggish blood sport. In Fighting the Good Fight, Proteau sheds light on the many perspectives of those in and around the game, with interviews of current and former NHL stars, coaches, general managers, and league executives, as well as medical experts. One of the most well-known media figures on the hockey scene today, famous for his funny, feisty observations as a writer for the Toronto Star and The Hockey News and commentator on CBC radio and TV, Adam Proteau is also one of the few mainstream media voices who is vehemently anti-fighting in hockey. Not only is his book a plea to the games gatekeepers to finally clamp down on the runaway violence that permeates the sport even at its highest level, he offers realistic suggestions on ways to finally clean the game up. * Includes interviews with medical experts on head injuries and concussions, as well as with other members of the media * The author not only wages an attack on the value of fighting in hockey--but also on the establishment hockey culture Covering the most polarizing issue in hockey today, Fighting the Good Fight gives hockey fans and sports lovers everywhere a reason to stamp their feet and whistle--at a rare display of eloquence and common sense. WebCatUpdater-Profile_26@1326742171896
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Seitenzahl: 467
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2011
CONTENTS
Preface
Part I: Joining the Rush
Chapter 1: Trading with the Balance of Probability
Probable Odds
Picture Perfect
Here’s Health
The Chart Says So
Defining the Balance
Annex
Chapter 2: Messages from the Jungle Drums
Constructing A Bar Chart
Reading A Bar By Candle Light
Understanding A Bar
Who Sets the Open?
Who Sets the Low?
Who Sets the High?
Most Importantly, Who Sets the Close?
Special Bars Open 24 Hours
Using A Bar
A Bar in Every Market
Annex
Chapter 3: Lasseter’s Reef
Persistent Probability
Planning to Avoid Failure
Caught on the Rebound
Chapter 4: Time Bites Character
Trading Time Bites
Daily Time
Weekly Confirmation
Bad Boys Make Good
Day-By-Day Emotional Extremes
Choose Your Time
Part II: Prospecting for Trades
Chapter 5: Searching for Love at First Profit
Start Digging
Getting Comfortable With Style
The Pot of Gold
One Technique, Many Markets
More Trades in One Market
Lists of Shopping Lists
Chapter 6: No Accounting for all Tastes
Financial Camouflage
Taxing Times
Do it Yourself Ratios
Balancing Acts
Software Bloodhounds
Taking A Different Path
Chapter 7: Eyeball Searches
The Eyes Have it
Building on Support
A Balance Tipped
Hot Tips
Eyestrain
Beyond the Eyeball
Chapter 8: Technical True Love — Searching For Relationships
Charting the Basic R-Plot
Advanced R-Plots
Inside Days
Gap Days
Out-of-Range Days
Price and Volume Break-Outs
Buying into Complexity
The Preliminary List Gets Bigger
Chapter 9: Performance Searches
From Zero to One and Beyond
Where Are We? An Average Answer
Data Manipulation
Crossed Signals
From Zero to 100 Percent
Speed Bumps
The Indicator Success Test
Juggling Lists
Chapter 10: An Assay Test — Looking for Life
Fixed Price
A Boot up the Market
The Boot on the Other Foot
Boots and all for the Trader
Guppy MMA Trading Rules
Assay Results
Annex
Chapter 11: Two Sides of the Same Coin
There’s a Bear in there
Step 1 — Getting An Id On Bias
Bully for the Bears
Step 2 — The Bull and Bear Test
Applying the Test
Profit Or Loss
Chapter 12: Index Hunting
Get Me An Index
Bilingual Indexes
Representative Approaches
Making Friends With Index Trends
Absolutely Mean
Fading the Index
Trading the Bell Curve
Turning Selected Nuggets Into Profit
Part III: Supplementary Numbers
Chapter 13: This Nugget Goes to Market
Group One: How Much Do We Need to Break Even?
Break-Even
Gross is Good But Net is Better
Group Two: Time and Risk
This Little Nugget Goes to Market
Chapter 14: Pinning a Number on Risk
Element 1: Fear of Loss
Planning For A Portfolio Bereavement
Measuring Loss
Element 2: Profit Objectives
Element 3: Timing Financial Objectives
Volatility
Trading Volatility
Plotting Trading Volatility
Hard Numbers
Trading Plan Summary
Last Standing, Best Dressed
Chapter 15: Using the Internet and Electronic Depth of Market
Levels of Information
Level 1
Level 2
Level 3
Level 4
Level 5
Ready, Set, Trade
Reading the Screen
Mining Markets
Mining Deep Markets
Going Up
Going Down
Cryptic Notations
Too Few, Too Late
Bully the Market
Validating Chart Analysis
Upside Instability
Freeze Frame Caution
Chapter 16: Trading Plans
Defining the Opportunity
Getting to Go
Managing the Trade
Getting to Stop
Exits
Trading Reality
Part IV: Failure Waits Upon Success
Chapter 17: Over-Trading
Reward Without Effort
Reward With Little Effort
So Much Money For So Little Work
Homework
Make Believe Work
Trading With Your Wallet
A Test For Over-Trading
Chapter 18: Nerves of Steel — or Chicken Wire?
Taking A Loss
Thresholds
A Trading Course
Trading With Maturity
Chapter 19: Command and Control
Bullies Love Control
Baby Bullies
Right Is Sometimes Wrong
Control the Controllable
Chapter 20: Gambler or Trader?
Professional Gambling
The Five ‘E’s’ of Gambling
Mirror, Mirror on the Wall
Life is A Gamble, But Trading is Not
∗About the Author
Annexe
Chapter 21: Insight and Irony
Glossary
Index
WILEY TRADING ADVANTAGE
The New Options Market, Fourth Edition / Max Ansbacher
Trading without Fear / Richard W. Arms, Jr.
Neural Network Time Series Forecasting of Financial Markets / E. Michael Azoff
Option Market Making / Alan J. Baird
Genetic Algorithms and Investment Strategies / Richard J. Bauer, Jr.
Technical Market Indicators / Richard J. Bauer, Jr. and Julie R. Dahlquist
Seasonality / Jake Bernstein
The Hedge Fund Edge / Mark Boucher
Encyclopedia of Chart Patterns / Thomas Bulkowski
Macro Trading and Investment Strategies / Gabriel Burstein
Beyond Technical Analysis / Tushar Chande
The New Technical Trader / Tushar Chande and Stanley S. Kroll
Integrated Technical Analysis / Ian Copsey
Trading the Plan / Robert Deel
New Market Timing Techniques / Thomas R. DeMark
The New Science of Technical Analysis / Thomas R. DeMark
Point and Figure Charting / Thomas J. Dorsey
Trading for a Living / Dr. Alexander Elder
Study Guide for Trading for a Living / Dr. Alexander Elder
The Day Trader’s Manual / William F. Eng
The Options Course / George A. Fontanills
The Options Course Workbook / George A. Fontanills
Stock Index Futures & Options / Susan Abbott Gidel
Contrary Opinion / R. Earl Hadady
Technical Analysis of the Options Markets / Richard Hexton
Pattern, Price & Time / James A. Hyerczyk
Profits from Natural Resources / Roland A. Jansen
The Trading Game / Ryan Jones
Trading Systems & Methods, Third Edition / Perry Kaufman
Trading to Win / Ari Kiev, M.D.
The Intuitive Trader / Robert Koppel
Nonlinear Pricing / Christopher T. May
McMillan on Options / Lawrence G. McMillan
Trading on Expectations / Brendan Moynihan
Intermarket Technical Analysis / John J. Murphy
The Visual Investor /John J. Murphy
Beyond Candlesticks / Steve Nison
Cybernetic Trading Strategies / Murray A. Ruggiero, Jr.
The Option Advisor / Bernie G. Schaeffer
Fundamental Analysis / Jack Schwager
Study Guide to Accompany Fundamental Analysis / Jack Schwager
Managed Trading / Jack Schwager
The New Market Wizards / Jack Schwager
Technical Analysis / Jack Schwager
Study Guide to Accompany Technical Analysis / Jack Schwager
Schwager on Futures / Jack Schwager
Gaming the Market / Ronald B. Shelton
The Dynamic Option Selection System / Howard L. Simons
Option Strategies, 2nd Edition / Courtney Smith
Trader Vic III Victor Sperandeo
Campaign Trading / John Sweeney
The Trader’s Tax Survival Guide, Revised Edition / Ted Tesser
The Trader’s Tax Solution / Ted Tesser
The Mathematics of Money Management / Ralph Vince
The New Money Management / Ralph Vince
Trading Applications of Japanese Candlestick Charting / Gary Wagner and Brad Matheny
Trading Chaos / Bill Williams
New Trading Dimensions / Bill Williams
Long-Term Secrets to Short-Term Trading / Larry Williams
Expert Trading Systems / John R. Wolberg
The Ultimate Trading Guide / John Hill, George Pruitt, Lundy Hill
Originally published by Wrightbooks Pty Ltd under the title, Trading Tactics: An Introduction to Finding, Exploiting and Managing Profitable Share Trading Opportunities
Copyright © 1997 by Daryl Guppy
This revised and updated edition published in 2000 by John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte Ltd
2 Clementi Loop, #02-01, Singapore 129809
Copyright © 2000 by John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte Ltd
For distribution throughout the world, except Australia and New Zealand
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except as expressly permitted by law, without either the prior written permission of the Publisher, or authorization through payment of the appropriate photocopy fee to the Copyright Clearance Center. Requests for permission should be addressed to the Publisher, John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte Ltd, 2 Clementi Loop, #02-01, Singapore 129809, tel: 65-4632400, fax: 65-4634605, e-mail: [email protected].
This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering professional services. If professional advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought.
Acknowledgments: All charts created by Metastock using data supplied by Stock Data Corp, KeyQuotes, Winrow Marketing, Electronic Information Solutions and ODDS.
Daryl Guppy 2000
e-mail: [email protected]
http://www.guppytraders.com
Other Wiley Editorial Offices
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 605 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10158-0012, USA
John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Baffins Lane, Chichester, West Sussex P019 1UD, England
John Wiley & Sons (Canada) Ltd, 22 Worcester Road, Rexdale, Ontario M9W 1L1, Canada
John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd, 33 Park Road (PO Box 1226), Milton, Queensland 4064, Australia
Wiley-VCH, Pappelallee 3, 69469 Weinheim, Germany
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Guppy, Daryl J., 1954 –
Market trading tactics: beating the odds through technical analysis and money management/Daryl Guppy.
p. cm.
Includes index.
ISBN 0-471-84663-5 (alk. paper)
1. Investment analysis. 2. Investments. I. Title.
HG4529.G87 2000
332..63′2042—dc21
PREFACE
TRACKING THE GHOST OF EL DORADO
As a child I was enthralled by the abandoned rusting hulk of the Eldorado gold dredge stranded on Reedy Creek near Yackandandah and captivated by small clear vials filled with gold dust laboriously panned by an old prospector from mountain creeks in Australia’s north-eastern Victoria. Despite broken nails, aching muscles, erratic returns, the dirt, dust and heat, I have always found the lure of prospecting for metals and minerals irresistible. Now my prospecting tools are the computer, the Internet, the stock market database and charting software — and the lure is still irresistible. The dust is banished by air-conditioning and only fingers ache from keyboarding. Yet the exploration principles remain the same.
The El Dorado sought by the Spanish conquistadors and described by Diaz in The Conquest of New Spain did not exist. Ours does. Every day the market surrenders a rich line of lode to the best traders. We have a choice between a pot of gold and a working gold mine. In this book I explore some ways of finding the lode and bringing it on-stream to build a working gold mine. I am not a market wizard so the techniques in this book require no specialist skills. The bulk of my income comes from trading the market and like many traders who have moved from working for a wage to trading for a living, just duplicating my wages is enough to keep me happy. There are fortunes to be made — and lost — in the market. Better prospectors make, and keep, these fortunes.
This book is written for those who want to survive, and for those who, while not aspiring to market wizard status, would like to more aggressively manage market risk by finding, exploiting and managing trading opportunities. These are skills needed for survival as a position trader. They are the basic skills on which day trading success is built. If you are prepared to pit your prospecting skill against those who have traditionally held the keys to the market, then this book will help equip you for the expedition.
Bull market conditions encourage novice traders. In a bull market the market pays for your mistakes as the general rise in stock prices allows for quick recovery of losses. In a bear market you pay for them. Some of what is written in the following chapters may appear to be unnecessarily complex or detailed, but when the bear bites, these are the basic disciplines that separate the survivors from market victims.
The processes described in this book are easy in principle but some are very time-demanding if applied indiscriminately. We start with broad selection procedures and as the list of trading candidates narrows, apply more specialized trading tactics.
SERIOUS TRADING
Trading is frustrating because, despite all the groundwork required before clicking the mouse button or picking up the phone to enter, or exit a trade, the market may still slip between your fingers.
Understanding the analysis, being in tune with the market, initiating and completing scanning processes and fine-tuning the financial aspects does not mean a trading opportunity will be revealed. The market does not owe us a living. Despite the hours of research, there is no guarantee that the stock will be available at the price we think is appropriate. There is no guarantee of any real trading opportunities identified by our painstaking analysis. There may be none that match all our criteria.
This is annoying, but it is only fatal if we settle for second best. As a private trader we do not have to trade. We can afford to wait until the best opportunities arise. This protects us from a market indifferent to our existence and survival.
There are always some market situations where the tools of technical analysis appear useless. This does not diminish the effectiveness of the tools. In the same way that a carpenter does not use a screwdriver to build a house, so a trader does not attempt to use technical tools in trading situations where they offer little help.
As traders we look for those opportunities compatible with the tools we are most skilled in using. To pretend that our particular tool kit will expose the secrets of all markets, or of any market segments is foolish. As traders we want to identify our strengths and weaknesses. By trading on our strengths, matching our trading style, and using the appropriate array of tools, we become better traders.
Success does count. Virtuosity is a theoretical skill if it does not wring financial rewards from trading. Trading approaches that mimic the apparent complexity of the markets are not always the best at understanding the markets. More difficult does not mean more accurate. Simple trading strategies score direct profits in complex systems so we aim in this book to dismember complexity into its simplest components. Here is the foundation for trading tactics.
A ROAD MAP FOR DISMEMBERING COMPLEXITY
Systems and systematic behavior are at the core of complexity. Complexity is a dynamical system positioned on the edge of chaos where a single event — the butterfly effect — could tip it into dangerous instability and collapse. Survival depends on the way the systems adapt to behavioral changes, moving forward along the cliff rather than to one side and over it.
Trading is on the very edge of chaos, riding alongside the market. Our survival depends on our ability to define our task and its components to select the right tools and deliver appropriate solutions.
The core of every complex system has a dominant characteristic. The cyclone is defined by wind, the turbulence of a waterfall by water, the clash of market activity by numerical data. We measure the cyclone with an anemometer, the flow of water with a Dethridge wheel and the market with a price chart. No matter how you make your trading selection — fundamental, technical, accounting, financial or news analysis — your trading improves when you know how to read a price chart with its message of probability.
JOINING THE RUSH
Trading with the Balance of Probability Chapter 1, goes to the core of every trading approach, matching the message of the chart with its implied information about probability. When some price combinations occur more frequently than others they signal a change in probability. The market throws up voluminous data, concealing this vital information. The cipher of understanding is the bar chart. The price bar, or candlestick display, is built on clear market emotions pointing to areas of increased probability. These Messages from the Jungle Drums, Chapter 2, track progress at the market battle front and save financial lives.
Chapter 3, Lasseter’s Reef, brings the balance of probability to life in a sample trade, showing how basic understanding is matched with market reality. This is a model of the trading nuggets we hope to find and our search begins when we select the best time frame. Time Bites Character, Chapter 4, shows how we focus short, immediate and long-term pictures into a single snapshot. The detail blurs as the structure emerges. Different time bites are used to confirm analysis across multiple time frames and so further stack the balance in our favor.
PROSPECTING FOR TRADES
Armed with an idea of how our trading opportunity might look and how we might recognize it we are ready to start Searching for Love at First Profit. Some traders choose to follow an accounting path. We give them guide information in No Accounting for All Tastes and explain how their path joins with ours when it comes to assessing and managing the trade.
We plunge into the jungle of technical indicators. This style of trading is a complex activity built on foundations of layered simplicity. We deconstruct some of these complex processes so you can rebuild them in a way that uniquely suits your trading style and financial requirements.
This is database mining at its finest. We consider the value of Eyeball Searches, which provide an essential reference point for every trading decision. We place it near the beginning of our search and also return to it towards the end. Some choose to use this bar chart analysis only at the end of their search but the techniques do not change. Other chartists look for Technical True Love — Searching For Relationships between price patterns and daily price bars. Other technical traders prefer Performance Searches as the best way of quickly finding trading opportunities. All these techniques use common concepts to bind complex groups together. Working with simplicity provides the keys to complexity.
This understanding lets us build effective criteria for speedy searches that quickly find the best trading candidates. These techniques are used by day traders, position traders and investors. Some search criteria are spelled out for you to copy into your charting or market software package. Those who want to fiddle and fine-tune further will find specialist publications listed in the text.
The nuggets uncovered are still untested in the fire of the market. We consider a new indicator used as An Assay Test — Looking for Life in Chapter 10. This combines our understanding of market behavior with data analysis to identify points of explosive price action. Price data is objective, but our analysis of it is not. There are always Two Sides of the Same Coin and we examine ways to identify and ultimately overcome our personal predisposition for gloom or glee. With this ghost acknowledged we finish the assay test interpretation and application with Index Hunting to match nuggets of trading opportunity with markets.
SUPPLEMENTARY NUMBERS
Discovery is nothing without exploitation. Our selected trading opportunities, mined from our database, come in different shapes and sizes. Not all trades are created equal and in This Nugget Goes to Market we examine the calculations required to rank the candidates from good to better and then best. The best satisfy our financial objectives. We breathe life into risk whenever we open a trade so Pinning a Number on Risk gives us an important advantage in validating financial objectives.
The key to successful exploitation of our hard-won trading opportunities comes in the shape of Using the Internet and Electronic Depth of Market. This unfamiliar collection of figures is too often ignored by traders, yet it opens a wealth of tactical information. We show you some ways to understand and use it to your advantage. This puts profit in our grasp and in Trading Plans we are able to step beyond this analysis to show how all the steps are combined in a real sample trade.
FAILURE WAITS UPON SUCCESS
We cannot just go through the motions of trading. It is not a mechanical process. Trading is hard, demanding work. It requires a thorough working knowledge of the market, of trading techniques and of money management. Above all it requires a psychological mastery of ourselves. At some stage every prospecting expedition comes to resemble a pilgrimage. Trading imposes stresses quite different from those experienced in any other job, and many would-be traders find that it is these psychological factors that defeat them.
The way we think about ourselves has a significant impact on the way we trade. Trading slides into Over-Trading when we abandon planning for movement, mistaking activity for purpose. Successful traders recognize this escape mechanism, and put it in the background so it does not distort their trading activities.
Behind every decision the trader makes there lurks a plethora of past sins and prejudices. Failure waits on every trade and there are factors other than the analysis of the trade that have a significant impact on our trading success. Stop-loss is good in theory but difficult in practice. Success depends on knowing the difference between Nerves of Steel — Or Chicken Wire? We look at matching stop-loss points with our nerves to improve stop-loss execution. Some traders, puffed with success from other financial activities, mutate into a market bully, sabotaging their own success. The market ignores Command and Control strategies so if you find yourself nodding in agreement, then heed the warning.
These are hidden hands driving, or sabotaging, our decision-making. Get to know them well because they are our trading companions always hitch-hiking a ride with success. These are hidden attitudes that cast a pall of darkness over our trading activities, shadowing the way to failure. We cannot eliminate or ignore them, so we must learn to live with them.
The most dangerous shadow of all is the unconscious belief that trading is a game of chance where anyone can walk off the street and take money from the market. Gambler or Trader? takes a professional look at trading behaviors suggestive of pathological gambling. Written specially for this book by an American private trader and psychologist, Paul I Munves, this chapter cuts authoritatively to the core of the gambling trader’s self-deception. It is not pretty reading, but nor are the consequences of gambling in the markets.
We are not alone in this expedition. Others search alongside us for nuggets. Some of them are real competitors but most are temporary participants. We want to emulate the survivors but few are initially aware of the Insight and Irony this involves. This book is only an introduction to some of the tools used in trading tactics. It does not complete the question ‘I am a trader because ...’ That is your task and the prospecting expedition turns out to be as much about this as it is about finding trading opportunities.
AN INTRODUCTION NOT A GUIDE
The procedures detailed in the following chapters are only one selection from many ways to approach the task of analysing the market for opportunities. Our purpose is to provide you with an introduction to a variety of approaches to encourage you to think more clearly about your current methods, or to help you make sense of the bewildering volume of market data. We want to provide you with the tools to finance, equip, explore, develop and exploit your own trading opportunities.
I have endeavored to answer many of the questions raised in readers’ e-mail via www.guppytraders.com and in comments from those who attended Trading Workshop seminars. Market data has been supplied by Stock Data Corp in the United States, Key Quotes in Singapore, Winrow Marketing in the United Kingdom, Electronic Information Solutions and ODDS in Australia. Further thanks must go to David Barnes, Bill McMaster, Will Evans and Nayan Ruparelia who were involved in the international edition of this book. Thanks also to my parents, Ted and Patricia, who labored through the original manuscripts. My wife, Marion, continued to demand an impossibly high standard of plain English, particularly in relation to apostrophes.
If you are reading this book I assume you are a serious trader or that you are serious about trading. This book assumes you have a working knowledge of the language of charting. Computerized charting tools sit, or soon will sit, on your desktop. This book will show you how to use them more effectively and give you search formulas to program direct into your computer.
We approach trading as a business so we must be systematic in the way we go about the many tasks associated with trading. This introduction will help you organize these tasks into a daily routine to take you quickly to the best of the current trading opportunities whether they be found in Lasseter’s reef, King Solomon’s gold mines, El Dorado or your own private mother lode of market data.
Every journey begins with a small step. We set out to explore for nuggets of trading opportunity but, like every prospector, we also discover a great deal more about ourselves. Trading involves many perils and this book aims to prevent the first step becoming a stumble.
Run with the bulls. Hunt with the bears. Trade well.
Daryl Guppy
Katherine 2000
Part I
JOINING THE RUSH
Chapter 1
Trading with the Balance of Probability
To trade or not to trade is the basic question. But is profit the only answer? Many novice traders think so.
Experienced traders learn that trading is the aggressive management of risk made possible by understanding the process of finding, exploiting and managing trading opportunities, financially and mentally. Traders regularly journey into the market jungle to mine nuggets of opportunity, returning with them to trade for profit. Successful traders understand the landscape and risk, and are properly equipped. The novice, equipped with little other than enthusiasm and a dream, walks into the jungle with an eye fixed on profit. Lacking tactical survival skills, few return.
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!