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Technical Analysis  Power Tools for Active Investors

Item Number:  2258
Date Published:  2005
Publisher:  Pearson Education
Number of Pages / Length:  264 Pages
Format:  Hardcover
Shipping Availability:  Usually ships within 24 hours.

Price:   65.00

Author(s):

Gerald Appel

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Gerald Appel is a world famous author and lecturer. A frequent guest on television and radio, he has appeared on Wall Street Week with Louis Ruykeyser and his articles and/or articles about him have appeared in Money Magazine, Barron’s, Technical Analysis of Stocks and Commodities Magazine, Stocks Futures and Options Magazine, Wealth Magazine, the New York Times, Forbes, Kiplinger’s Magazine, and elsewhere. He is the founder of Signalert Corporation, an investment advisory firm that manages more than $300 million in client assets and is the author of numerous books and articles regarding investment strategies, including Technical Analysis: Power Tools for the Active Investor (Financial Times Prentice Hall, 2005).


Synopsis:

In this book, one of the world's most respected technical analysts presents a complete course in forecasting future market behavior through cyclical, trend, momentum, and volume signals. Unlike most technical analysis books, Gerald Appel's The Practical Guide to Technical Analysis offers step-by-step instructions virtually any investor can use to achieve breakthrough market success.

Description:

Appel illuminates a wide range of strategies and timing models, demystifying even advanced technical analysis for the first time. He presents technical analysis solutions for short-, intermediate-, and long-term investors, and even for mutual fund investors. Many of the strategies and models he presents have never before been published. Several are based on MACD, a tool that revolutionized technical analysis—and one that he created.

The author currently supervises over $550 million in investments: This book distills his 40 years of trading experience into a relentlessly practical guide you can start profiting from right now.

  • Learn technical analysis from one of the world's top experts
    Hands-on guidance from Gerald Appel, publisher of Systems and Forecasts.
  • Coping with today's unprecedented market volatility
    Indispensable techniques for profiting in uncertain markets.
  • Winning techniques that take just 10 minutes a week
    Better results than "buy and hold"—with far less risk.
  • Riding the tides of market wave movement
    How to recognize crucial political, seasonal, and time-based cycles.
  • Bottom fishing, top spotting, and staying the course
    You can time the market. Here's how.
  • MACD: the ultimate market timing indicator
    Breakthrough techniques that revolutionized technical analysis... invented by the author himself.
  • Using yesterday's action to predict tomorrow's
    How you can profit from Moving Average Trading Bands.
  • Putting it all together
    Using everything you've learned to organize a more effective market strategy.

Introduction

This book, The Practical Guide to Technical Analysis, is meant for every investor who has been hurt trusting his brokerage firm, trusting his friendly mutual fund manager, trusting the latest hot guru. It is meant for every investor who has ever wished for the skills required to deal with an increasingly volatile and uncertain stock market. It is meant for every investor willing to take responsibility for the outcome of his own investments. It is meant for every investor ready to take at least some of the time and to place at least some of the effort required for the quest.

The stock market tends to condition investors to make the wrong decisions at the wrong times. For instance, the stock market explosion of the late 1920s convinced investors that the only path for stocks was up, and that the prospects of stocks rising indefinitely justified even the high levels of margin leverage that could be employed at the time.

Investors plowed in, the stock market collapsed, and the public, thereafter, remained fearful of stocks for twenty years al though the stock market actually reached its lows during 1931 and 1932. In the mid-1990s, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index was king, index mutual funds the royal coach. Between 1996–1998 huge inflows of capital were injected into Standard & Poor's 500-based index mutual funds, such as those sponsored by Vanguard—the largest inflows taking place just prior to a serious intermediate market decline that took place in mid-1998. The market advance that followed that decline was headed not by the Standard & Poor's 500 sector of the stock market but rather by speculative areas of the Nasdaq Composite, technology sectors—internet issues and the like—which, in some cases, sold for hundreds of dollars per share even though many companies had no earnings whatsoever. And then came the crash in March of 2000, with the Nasdaq Composite ultimately declining by more than 77%.

So, investors returned to the sanctity of total return, value, earnings, and dividends, not the worst strategy during the bear market that took place between 2000–2002, but definitely not the best of strategies once the new bull market more clearly emerged during the spring of 2003. The play returned to technology, the internet, growth back in, total return back out. (During the first nine months of 2004, however, technology issues once again lost market leadership to value and income-oriented market sectors.)

The point, of course, is that the typical investor follows and does not lead trends, is late rather than early, is a crowd follower rather than a self-director. According to Dalbar Inc., a financial services research firm, the average equity fund investor realized an annualized return of 5.32% between 1984–2000 while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose at a rate of 16.3% per annum. Matters become even worse when comparisons are updated through July 2003—the average investor ahead by only 2.6% per year for the 1984–2003 period compared to annualized returns of 12.2% for the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

This book has been prepared to help investors achieve better than average performance; considerably better, we believe.

The structure of this book has been designed to provide information and investment tools, some of which may be put to work immediately, by both sophisticated and relatively unsophisticated stock market investors. I will share with you, right at the start, my very favorite techniques for picking mutual funds and "ETFs" (securities that trade on the stock exchange which act similarly to market index mutual funds, but which provide greater investment flexibility at lower ongoing internal management fees; though, possibly, with some initial commission expense, which is often involved with mutual funds as well).

We will move on from there to some of the basic tools employed by stock market technicians to track and to predict market behavior. A certain amount of statistical calculations will be required in the application of some of the "practical power tools" you will be learning. Nothing truly complex. I have placed a strong emphasis on the "practical" in "practical power tools." The KISS (keep it simple, stupid) principle will be observed throughout the book—at least to the best of my ability.

For example, in Chapter 1 alone, I will show you two indicators that, between them, should require no more than five or ten minutes (at the outside) for you to post and to maintain each week—that's right, each week, not each day—but which have had a fine history of helping investors discriminate between favorable and unfavorable market climates. Nothing in the stock market can ever be guaranteed for the future, of course, but you will see how powerful these two simple indicators have been over more than three decades of stock market history in supplementing your selections for market investment with straightforward but surprisingly effective market-timing strategies.

Even if you go no further, you will have already acquired a useful arsenal of tools for improved investment results. By this time, you may well have become ready for additional, more involved, technical tools that I have found over the decades to be more than useful in my own investment decisions. These will include, for example, "T-formations," which are special time-based patterns of market movement that frequently provide advance notice of when market turning points are likely to occur. In a subsequent chapter, the application of "moving average trading channels" is discussed, a technique for employing certain patterns of past market behavior to predict likely patterns for the future.

And finally, my personal take on "moving average convergence-divergence" (MACD) is included, an indicator that I invented in the late 1970s that, since then, has become one of the most widely followed of market forecasting tools employed by technical analysts, private and professional. We will see how to maintain the MACD indicator, and how to interpret it, for time frames ranging from fifteen minutes (for day trading) to many years (for long-term investing).

Each of these indicators, alone, can be quite powerful. All the more so, as you develop the facility for combining various elements of your trading strategy for disciplined decision-making, higher returns, and less risk. Synergy does help the cause. I will show you many ways to achieve this synergy.

All in all, The Practical Guide to Technical Analysis is about the best stock market timing tools that I have learned in nearly forty years of studying, trading in, and writing about the stock market. These are real tools, practical tools, tools that I and my staff employ each and every day in tracking the stock market and for the investment of our own and client capital. These are tools that you, yourself, can begin to employ, almost immediately.

In this book, one of the world's most respected technical analysts presents a complete course in forecasting future market behavior through cyclical, trend, momentum, and volume signals. Unlike most technical analysis books, Gerald Appel's Technical Analysis offers step-by-step instructions virtually any investor can use to achieve breakthrough market success.

Appel illuminates a wide range of strategies and timing models, demystifying even advanced technical analysis for the first time. He presents technical analysis solutions for short-, intermediate-, and long-term investors, and even for mutual fund investors. Many of the strategies and models he presents have never before been published. Several are based on MACD, a tool that revolutionized technical analysis—and one that he created.

This book distills over thirty years of trading experience into a practical guide you can start profiting from right now.

  • Learn technical analysis from one of the world's top experts.
    Hands-on guidance from Gerald Appel, publisher of Systems and Forecasts
  • Coping with today's unprecedented market volatility
    Indispensable techniques for profiting in uncertain markets
  • Winning techniques that take just 10 minutes a week
    Better results than "buy and hold"—with far less risk
  • Riding the tides of market wave movement
    How to recognize crucial political, seasonal, and time-based cycles
  • MACD: The ultimate market timing indicator invented by the author himself
    Includes new, advanced breakthrough techniques that revolutionize technical analysis
  • How you can profit from technical analysis... step-by-step!

By Gerald Appel, inventor of the MACD technique used by virtually every serious technical analyst

How to uncover the hidden clues that reveal when markets are about to shift

For short-term, medium-term, and long-term investors—including those new to technical analysis

Table of Contents

  • Foreword.
  • Acknowledgments.
  • Introduction.
  • The No-Frills Investment Strategy.
  • Picking the Right Investment Vehicles.
  • Risk: Reward Comparisons Between More Volatile and Less Volatile Equity Mutual Fund Portfolios
  • Gain/Pain Ratios
  • Drawdown: The Measure of Ultimate Risk
  • The End Result: Less Is More
  • Changing Your Bets While the Race Is Still Underway
  • Relative Strength Investing
  • Testing the Relative Strength Investment Strategy: A 14-Year Performance Record of Relative Strength Investing
  • Results of Quarterly Reranking and Quarterly Rebalancing (1990-2003)
  • Buy-and-Hold Results: The Standard & Poor's 500 Benchmark
  • Increasing the Risk: Maintaining a Portfolio of Somewhat More Aggressive Mutual Funds
  • Observations
  • Upping the Ante: The Effects of Applying the Concepts of Relative Strength Selection to a Still More Volatile Portfolio of Mutual Funds
  • General Observations
  • A Quick Review of Relative Strength Investing
  • Summing Up
  • Two Quick-and-Dirty Stock Market Mood Indicators.
  • Identifying High- and Low-Risk Investment Climates
  • The Nasdaq/New York Stock Exchange Index Relative Strength Indicator
  • The Maintenance and Interpretation of the Nasdaq/NYSE Index Relative Strength Indicator
  • Observations
  • Measuring the Market Mood with the Intermediate Monetary Filter
  • The Monetary Model
  • The Ingredients
  • The Calculation and Rules of the Intermediate Monetary Filter
  • Observations
  • Combining the Two Indicators
  • Point and Counterpoint
  • Observations
  • A Final Long-Term Statistic
  • Summing Up
  • Moving Averages and Rates of Change: Tracking Trend and Momentum.
  • The Purpose of Moving Averages
  • The Intermediate-Term Moving Average
  • The Long-Term 200-Day Moving Average
  • Using Weekly-Based Longer-Term Moving Averages
  • Moving Averages and Very Long-Term Moving Averages
  • Moving Averages: Myths and Misconceptions
  • Using Moving Averages to Identify the Four Stages of the Market Cycle
  • Stage 1
  • Patterns of Moving Averages During Stage 1
  • Stage 2
  • Patterns of Moving Averages During Stage 2 Advances
  • Stage 3
  • Patterns of Moving Averages During Stage 3 Distribution Periods
  • Stage 4
  • The Rate of Change Indicator: How to Measure and Analyze the Momentum of the Stock Market
  • The Concept and Maintenance of the Rate of Change Indicator
  • Constructing Rate of Change Measurements
  • Bull Market and Bear Market Rate of Change Patterns
  • Adjusting Overbought and Oversold Rate of Change Levels for Market Trend
  • Looking Deeper into Levels of the Rate of Change Indicator
  • The Triple Momentum Nasdaq Index Trading Model
  • Maintenance Procedure
  • Notes Regarding Research Structure
  • Rate of Change Patterns and the Four Stages of the Stock Market Cycle
  • More Than Just Pretty Pictures: Power Tool Chart Patterns.
  • The Concept of Synergy
  • Powerful Chart Formations
  • Example 1
  • Example 2
  • Example 3
  • The Wedge Formation: Times to Accumulate and Times to Distribute Stocks
  • The Wedge Formation
  • Declining Wedge Formations
  • Appropriate Strategies
  • Synergy in Chart Patterns
  • Head and Shoulder Formations
  • Using the Head and Shoulder Formation to Establish Downside Price Objectives
  • At Market Bottoms, the Inverse Head and Shoulder Formation
  • Confirmation by Measures of Market Momentum
  • Volume Spikes Are Very Bullish If the Stock Market Has Been in Decline
  • The Selling Climax
  • Support and Resistance Levels
  • Support Zones
  • Support Zones
  • Resistance Zones
  • Example: The 1999-2003 Stock Market Climate (Chart 4.4)
  • Market Downtrends
  • Major Trend Synergy in Action
  • Tricks with Trendlines
  • Inverse Trendline Support and Resistance Zones
  • Channel Support and Resistance
  • Early Warnings Provided by Channel Patterns
  • Extended Channel Support
  • Rising Resistance Zones
  • False Breakouts and Breakdowns: Key Market Patterns
  • A Significant Sell Signal
  • A Significant Buy Signal
  • The Key
  • Political, Seasonal, and Time Cycles: Riding the Tides of Market Wave Movements.
  • Calendar-Based Cycles in the Stock Market
  • Days of the Month
  • Pre-Holiday Pattern
  • The Best and Worst Months of the Year
  • The Best Six-Month Period, the Worst Six-Month Period
  • Evaluating the Tabulations
  • The Presidential Stock Market Cycle
  • Comments
  • Time Cycles: Four Days to Four Years
  • Example of Market Cycles: The 53-Day Market Cycle
  • Segments of Market Cycles
  • The Significance of Segmentation
  • Distinguishing Bullish Cyclical Patterns from Bearish Patterns
  • Lest We Forget the Concept of Synergy...
  • Lengths of Market Cycles
  • The Very Significant and Regular Four-Year Market Cycle
  • An Intermediate Market Cycle with a Confirming Indicator
  • How the Confirming Indicator Helps the Cause
  • The August-September Cycle
  • The October-November Cycle
  • The November to Early January Market Cycle
  • The January-March Cycle
  • The 18-Month Market Cycle with a Rate of Change Confirming Indicator
  • Synergy Between Rates of Change and Cyclical Patterns
  • Enter the Rate of Change Indicator
  • For Future Readers of This Work
  • Day Trading with Short-Term Cycles
  • T-Formation: The Ultimate Cyclical Power Tool?
  • The Construction of T-Formations
  • Area 1
  • Area 2
  • Area 3
  • Area 4
  • Further Examples of T-Formations, Including the Application of Synergy
  • T-Formations and Mirror Patterns of Stock Movement
  • T-Formations and Longer-Term Time Periods
  • Supplemental Indicators
  • One Final Set of T-Formations
  • In Summary
  • Seasonal and Calendar Influences on the Stock Market
  • Time Cycles
  • T-Formations
  • Bottom Fishing, Top Spotting, Staying the Course: Power Tools That Combine Momentum Oscillators with Market Breadth Measurements for Improved Market Timing.
  • A Quick Review of Where We Have Been
  • The "Internal" as Opposed to the "External" Stock Market
  • Measures of Market Breadth
  • New Highs and New Lows
  • New High/New Low Confirmations of Price Trends in the Stock Market
  • Positive and Negative Confirmations, 1995-2004
  • New Lows at a Developing Stock Market Bottom
  • Creating a New High/New Low Indicator to Keep You in the Stock Market When the Odds Heavily Favor the Stock Market Investor
  • Method of Interpretation
  • The Application of the New High/(New Highs + New Lows) Indicator to the Nasdaq Composite
  • Pre-Bear Market Comparisons
  • The New York Stock Exchange Advance-Decline Line
  • Relating to Advance-Decline Breadth Data
  • General Observations
  • Chart 6.4: The Advance-Decline Line Between 2002 and 2004
  • The 21-Day Rate of Change of the Advance-Decline Line
  • Overbought Levels
  • Oversold Levels
  • Breadth Patterns at Bull Market Highs 1997-2000: A Period of Breadth Transition
  • A Change in Tone
  • A Major Negative Breadth Divergence Followed
  • Using a Somewhat More Sensitive Rate of Change Measure of the Advance-Decline Line
  • The Ten-Day Rate of Change Indicator
  • The Weekly Impulse Continuation Signal
  • But First, an Introduction to the Exponential Moving Average
  • The Smoothing Constant of Exponential Averages
  • Example 1
  • Example 2
  • Example 3
  • Stabilizing the Exponential Average
  • Some Special Qualities of Exponential Moving Averages
  • The Weekly Impulse Signal
  • The Required Items of Data Each Week
  • Buy and Sell Signals
  • General Concept of the Weekly Breadth Impulse Signal
  • Final Comments
  • The Daily-Based Breadth Impulse Signal
  • The Construction and Maintenance of the Daily-Based Breadth Impulse Signal
  • The Performance Record of the Daily Breadth Impulse Signal
  • The Application of the Daily-Based Breadth Impulse Signal to Trading the Nasdaq Composite Index
  • Caveat
  • Volume Extremes, Volatility, and VIX: Recognizing Climactic Levels and Buying Opportunities at Market Low Points.
  • Market Tops: Calm Before the Storm; Market Bottoms: Storm Before the Calm
  • TRIN: An All-Purpose Market Mood Indicator
  • The Data Required to Compute TRIN
  • Calculating TRIN
  • Interpreting TRIN Levels
  • TRIN as a Bottom Finding Tool
  • The Volatility Index (VIX) and Significant Stock Market Buying Zones
  • The Volatility Index
  • Theoretical Pricing of Options
  • Implied Volatility
  • Ranges of VIX
  • Bullish Vibes from VIX
  • Summing Up
  • The Major Reversal Volatility Model
  • Calculating the Major Reversal Volatility Model
  • Major Market-Reversal Buy Signals
  • The 1970-1979 Decade
  • The 1979-1989 Decade
  • The 1989-1999 Decade
  • Post-1999: Mixed Results
  • The Ideal Scenario
  • Advanced Moving Average Convergence-Divergence (MACD): The Ultimate Market Timing Indicator?
  • Scope of Discussion
  • The Basic Construction of the Moving Average Convergence-Divergence Indicator
  • Basic Concepts
  • Trend Confirmation
  • The Signal Line
  • Very Important Supplementary Buy and Sell Rules
  • Rationale for Supplementary Rules
  • Using Divergences to Recognize the Most Reliable Signals
  • Additional Examples
  • Improving MACD Signals by Using Different MACD Combinations for Buying and Selling
  • Two MACD Combinations Are Often Better Than One
  • MACD During Strong Market Uptrends
  • MACD During Market Downtrends
  • Modifying MACD Rules to Secure the Most from Strong Market Advances
  • Reviewing Chart 8.9
  • Market Entry Supported by Positive Divergence
  • Moving Averages, MACD Patterns Confirm Advance
  • Initial Sell Signal Not Reinforced by Any Negative Divergence
  • Secondary Sell Signal Confirmed by Negative Divergence
  • Use Moving Average as Back-Up Stop Signal
  • The Stop-Loss When Trades Prove Unsuccessful
  • Synergy: MACD Confirmed by Other Technical Tools
  • MACD Patterns Confirmed by Cyclical Studies
  • When the MACD Does Not Provide the Most Timely Signals
  • Money Management with the MACD (and Other Indicators)
  • An MACD Configuration That Suggests More Active Selling
  • MACD Through the Years: Long Term, Short Term, and Intraday
  • The Start of a Bull Market
  • An Example of the MACD Stop-Loss Signal in Action
  • MACD Employed for Day-Trading Purposes
  • MACD and Major Market Trends
  • The Amazing Ability of the MACD to Identify Significant Market Low Points Following Severe Stock Market Declines
  • MACD Patterns and Significant Market Bottoms
  • Initial Rally at Start of Year
  • Brief Decline and Well-Timed Market Re-Entry
  • Rally and Topping Formation
  • Waterfall Decline, and Then Bottoming Process
  • Final Shakeout and Recovery
  • MACD and the Four Stages of the Market Cycle
  • Reviewing Rules and Procedures Associated with the MACD Indicator
  • Creating and Maintaining Your MACD Indicator
  • Buy Signals
  • Prerequisite
  • Sell Signals
  • Converting the Daily Breadth Thrust Model into an Intermediate Entry
  • Buy Signals
  • Sell Signals
  • Providing That...
  • Summary of Results
  • MACD Filtered Breadth Thrust Applied to the Nasdaq Composite Index
  • Moving Average Trading Channels: Using Yesterday's Action to Call Tomorrow's Turns.
  • The Basic Ingredients of the Moving Average Trading Channel
  • Creating the Channel
  • What Length of Offset Should Be Used?
  • Moving Average Trading Channels in Operation
  • Area A: The Chart Opens with a Market Downtrend
  • Area B: The First Recovery Rally
  • Area X: The Technical Picture Improves
  • Area D: The Upper Trading Band Is Reached
  • Area E: Prices Retrace to the Center Channel
  • Area F: Improving Market Momentum Confirmed
  • Bullish Indications
  • Area G: The Center Line of the Moving Average Trading Channel
  • Area H: Warning Signs
  • Area I to J: One Final Attempt That Fails
  • The Basic Concept
  • The Evolution of Phases Within the Moving Average Trading Channel
  • A Classic Topping Formation to End a Major Bull Market
  • Chart 9.2: The Ingredients
  • January 2000: The Bull Market in Nasdaq Moves Along Steadily
  • Area E: The Fun and Games of the Bull Market Come to an End
  • Area F: Trend Reversal Is Confirmed and Completed
  • The Development of a Bottom Formation
  • Moving Average Channels and the Major Trend
  • 1996-1998: Strong Bullish Upthrust
  • The First Correction Stops at the Center Channel Line
  • Resurgence of Market Advance
  • Technical Warnings Develop
  • The Top Formation Moves Along
  • Major Downtrend Gets Seriously Underway
  • Patterns Suggest a Phasing-Out of Long Positions
  • Significant Downturn Is Confirmed
  • How to Construct a Price/Moving Average Differential Oscillator
  • A Review of the Key Rules Associated with Moving Average Trading Band Trading
  • Putting It All Together: Organizing Your Market Strategies.
  • The First Step: Define the Major Trend and Major Term Cycles of the Stock Market
  • The Second Step: Check Out Market Mood Indicators and Seasonal Cycles
  • The Third Step: Establish the Direction and Strength of the Current Intermediate Trend and Try to Project the Time and Place of the Next Intermediate-Term Reversal Area
  • The Fourth Step: Fine-Tune Your Intermediate-Term Studies with Studies Based on Shorter-Term Daily-or Even Hourly-Market Readings
  • Remember Our Favorite Mutual Fund Selection Strategy!
  • Lessons I Have Learned During 40 Years as a Trader
  • Recommended Reading and Resources
  • Charting Resources
  • Sources for Research
  • Books Relating to Technical Analysis
  • Investment Newsletters
  • Index.

Reader Reviews:

"Twenty-nine years ago, Jerry and I wrote a stock market book together. He's still going at it, and once again, he's come up with a very rewarding and profitable book on stocks. I have been reading Jerry's market letter since the early 1970s and he's done a great job while keeping risk to a minimum. I am also familiar with his track record of running "real" money. Again, risk-adjusted, the returns have been very solid. I highly recommend this 'no nonsense' book."

—Marty Zweig

"Gerald Appel has no peer in the practice of technical analysis. Not only has he made groundbreaking analytical contributions to the field, but Jerry has used the same trading methods to become one of the most successful money managers on Wall Street. In this masterly text, Gerry shares his favorite timing indicators and strategies, distilled from a more than 30-year career at the top of his profession."

—Nelson Freeburg, Editor, Formula Research

"Experienced investors or beginners should not be without it. Appel draws on over 30 years of experience as an active money manager and publisher of his highly regarded newsletter, Systems and Forecasts. I can't recommend it enough."

—Dan Sullivan, Publisher and Editor of The Chartist newsletter

"In Technical Analysis, the inventor of MACD, Jerry Appel, provides a crash course in timing and beating the market. Appel opens his bag-of-tricks and teaches investors the skills to handle their own portfolios like a pro. Included is a comprehensive chapter on his MACD Indicator, arguably one of the most reliable market timing gauges. MACD-timing triples the results of our "Best Six Months" switching strategy! A must-read for do-it-yourself investors and traders of all sizes."

—Jeffrey A. Hirsch, Editor, Stock Trader's Almanac

"Over the years I have seen gurus come and go, but Gerald Appel has been steady over 30 years. For serious market students, this book contains useful and practical power tools for making money and cutting losses."

—Ned Davis, Ned Davis Research

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