

As far as I know, this is the best stock market predictor there is, for any
developed economy. If used properly. Science may call its results unlikely,
with a so-called 'hitratio' of well over 98% (and extremely close to 100%). 



Example, using the provided data:


(1)   LIST.EXE AEX 20090313

This uses the AEX-index, included in the data files, to define trading days
and creates a prediction on the 14th of March 2009. It's output is a normal
text file. 

(2)   LIST.EXE AEX 20090911

This will create a new prediction on the 11th of September 2009. 

(3)   RANKKING.EXE 20090313 20090911

This will create a HTML file which does contain the results of the previous
prediction and displays the latest prediction. It's also possible to view a
similar text file that's also created, RANKKING.PRN.

(4)   View the included file Results.PNG

This is a graph of the results and isn't a part of RankKing as such. The x-
axis represents the original order of the stocks and indices. The y-axis is    
representing the ROI in %.



RankKing sorts stocks in such a way that its output contains a 'sweetspot', 
by average easily outperforming the whole market with a huge margin. 


There's no free support at all, so you'll have to discover the sweetspot(s) 
yourself. The same goes for possible known errors, disclaimers and usage. I
also won't explain the underlying way it works, et cetera.


If there's any support, it probably won't be that cheap, and it'll be aimed
at applying RankKing's output. The provided files can be used free, but the
interpretation and/or use of its output is up to you. I'ld rather confirm a
'buy' or invest based on interpreting it, instead of creating a PM version.  
I like investing more than programming, basicly. You can obviously use this
software for free, but you're on your own then. I really hope you can find,
understand, and maybe apply the sweetspot(s), but your ROI isn't my problem
at all. The software or data it uses can be considered to be unsupported. I
also don't have data available for all developed stock markets.


Finally please do note the sweetspot(s) in the output file should always be  
seen as a short-list, despite of the fantastic hitratio. Disclaimers: many.
It just works for me (m1@uni-one.nl).
