One October evening, with winter natural gas inventory reports due at 10:30 AM, Marcus saw something rare: eight of his ten high-probability signals blinking green. Storage builds were below average. Weather models showed a polar vortex forming. Open interest was rising without price exhaustion.
That old book sat on his desk, spine cracked, margins filled with notes. Under the title, he had scribbled: Higher Probability Commodity Trading- A Compreh...
Then he found a dog-eared copy of "Higher Probability Commodity Trading- A Comprehensive Guide to the Universe of Commodity Futures" buried in a used bookstore near the Board of Trade. One October evening, with winter natural gas inventory
Marcus leaned over two flickering screens in a Chicago loft, the smell of coffee and old risk hanging in the air. For three years, he had traded commodity futures like a gambler pulling a slot machine lever—hoping for crude oil to spike or corn to plummet. He lost more than he won. Open interest was rising without price exhaustion
By spring, his win rate hadn’t changed dramatically. But his risk-adjusted returns had tripled. He wasn’t predicting markets anymore. He was playing numbers—and the numbers finally leaned his way.
“Certainty is a myth. Probability is a profession.” Would you like a fictional excerpt from the first chapter of that book, or a real-world summary of the strategies such a guide might contain?