Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
All my finance profs always regarded that as pure bullshit. I've seen papers that show statistically sig. alpha (95 or 99% a>0...can't remember offhand) with genetic algos using technical indicators to buy and sell, but there's no evidence showing any sort of fixed technical analysis strategy creating a positve alpha.
On the latter note, this is how i explain that phenomenon:
if I have 100 people roll a 6sided die 100 times, the winners will have long streaks of rolling 6s. The fact that they were able to roll many 6s in row isn't a testament to their rolling skill, but merely a demonstration that they were the luckiest of all the 100 people and won the competition.
The fact that some people made money trading on some technical indicator isn't a testament to their skill, but rather that they were the luckiest of the bunch. Think about the CNBC portfolio challenge... do you think the winners were the most skilled of all the "investors" playing?
(I stole the above from Samuelson's research on efficient markets I think)
Originally posted by: dullard
Here are the DJIA's biggest % gain days:
#1) March 1933: +15.3% in a day. Yes, this was near the all time bottom and was near the start of a new rally. But the DJIA stagnated in 1933 and 1934 and didn't really get out of its funk until 1942.
#2) Oct 1931: +14.9%. This was halfway through the 1929-1933 crash.
#3) Oct 1929: +12.3%. This was right at the start of the depression stock market crash.
#4) Sept 1932: +11.4%. This was still in the 1929-1933 crash.
#5) Oct 2008: +11.1%. Well, you know what happened since then.
#6) Oct 2008: +10.9%. Well, you know what happened since then.
#7) Oct 1987: +10.2%. The 1980s were a decent decade. But 1987 was flat. It started and ended at about the same point.
#8) Aug 1932: +9.5%. This was near the end of the fall.
#9) Feb 1932: +9.5%. This was still in the 1929-1933 crash.
#10-#13) All were in the 1929-1933 crash.
#15-#16) All were in the 1929-1933 crash.
#18-#20) All were in the 1929-1933 crash.
Today's gain of 5.8% was a bit less than the 6.8% gain of #20.
With the possible exception of #1 and #7, all big gains were in the crash phase. Stocks don't rally big during bull markets. Stocks usually rally big when the stock market is still falling.
Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
All my finance profs always regarded that as pure bullshit. I've seen papers that show statistically sig. alpha (95 or 99% a>0...can't remember offhand) with genetic algos using technical indicators to buy and sell, but there's no evidence showing any sort of fixed technical analysis strategy creating a positve alpha.
On the latter note, this is how i explain that phenomenon:
if I have 100 people roll a 6sided die 100 times, the winners will have long streaks of rolling 6s. The fact that they were able to roll many 6s in row isn't a testament to their rolling skill, but merely a demonstration that they were the luckiest of all the 100 people and won the competition.
The fact that some people made money trading on some technical indicator isn't a testament to their skill, but rather that they were the luckiest of the bunch. Think about the CNBC portfolio challenge... do you think the winners were the most skilled of all the "investors" playing?
(I stole the above from Samuelson's research on efficient markets I think)
Originally posted by: senseamp
So CEO of an insolvent bank says it's "profitable" and the market rallies 5% ?
Bear market rally, which is not to say some things like oil/commodities are not oversold.
Originally posted by: Skoorb
March10_2009.jpg
I highlighted the real doozies here. Granted, the articles are more than just the title, but I found the titles fairly representative of the highlights.
Stock Picks for 'Dow 8000' Bounce
BlackRock's Doll: Don't Miss Rare Buying Opportunity
Hirschhorn: 5 Reasons to Get Back Into the Market
Global Pros Say: Market to Bottom This Quarter
We've seen a lot of bottom calling and bullishness all the way down. I don't buy it. I do, for once, hope I'm wrong. Anyhow, I'm marking in my calendar to bump this!
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
odds are it will go down a bit more, probably into the mid-5k's
I personally think we are nearing the end, with job losses slowing toward the end of the year. this quarter will probably be another bad one though.
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
Originally posted by: Lothar
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
"Charts are great for predicting the past."
-Peter Lynch
"I realized technical analysis didn't work when I turned the charts upside down and didn't get a different answer...If past history was all there was to the game, the richest people would be librarians."
-Warren Buffett
I'm more inclined to listen to them than some idiot bubblehead on CNBC spoting technical analysis data.
All this talk about "resistance", "support", etc... is moronic. I've seen no such evidence that their predictions always turn out to be correct.
So you guys are saying this is bullsh*t? It sure reads like it. Lots of pretty terms and numbers, thoughOriginally posted by: LegendKiller
Originally posted by: Lothar
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
"Charts are great for predicting the past."
-Peter Lynch
"I realized technical analysis didn't work when I turned the charts upside down and didn't get a different answer...If past history was all there was to the game, the richest people would be librarians."
-Warren Buffett
I'm more inclined to listen to them than some idiot bubblehead on CNBC spoting technical analysis data.
All this talk about "resistance", "support", etc... is moronic. I've seen no such evidence that their predictions always turn out to be correct.
Agree 100%. You haven't seen it because it doesn't exist.
Good catch! I rushed my post and basically skipped over the details of that event. As you said, #7 was the day after Black Monday. The market kept crashing for about a month after #7. So, it too followed the trend of being a big gain in a bear market.Originally posted by: geoffry
Actually, I believe that 1987 day was the day after Black Monday...which was one helluva crash.
Originally posted by: Skoorb
So you guys are saying this is bullsh*t? It sure reads like it. Lots of pretty terms and numbers, thoughOriginally posted by: LegendKiller
Originally posted by: Lothar
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
"Charts are great for predicting the past."
-Peter Lynch
"I realized technical analysis didn't work when I turned the charts upside down and didn't get a different answer...If past history was all there was to the game, the richest people would be librarians."
-Warren Buffett
I'm more inclined to listen to them than some idiot bubblehead on CNBC spoting technical analysis data.
All this talk about "resistance", "support", etc... is moronic. I've seen no such evidence that their predictions always turn out to be correct.
Agree 100%. You haven't seen it because it doesn't exist.![]()
Originally posted by: LegendKiller
Originally posted by: Skoorb
So you guys are saying this is bullsh*t? It sure reads like it. Lots of pretty terms and numbers, thoughOriginally posted by: LegendKiller
Originally posted by: Lothar
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: halik
Everything in that box is bullshit, especially if it mentions "chartists" or "chart pros".
I have read that there is absolutely no academic evidence supporting technical analysis.
That said, I see numerous posts in the stock market thread explaining decisions made based on technical principles.![]()
"Charts are great for predicting the past."
-Peter Lynch
"I realized technical analysis didn't work when I turned the charts upside down and didn't get a different answer...If past history was all there was to the game, the richest people would be librarians."
-Warren Buffett
I'm more inclined to listen to them than some idiot bubblehead on CNBC spoting technical analysis data.
All this talk about "resistance", "support", etc... is moronic. I've seen no such evidence that their predictions always turn out to be correct.
Agree 100%. You haven't seen it because it doesn't exist.![]()
Yeah, it's bullshit. First off, if you could read a chart and predict where things were going, the market would catch on, read the same thing, and eliminate all predictability.
Originally posted by: Yoxxy
That is the basis of technical trading though, they start the rally, or fade the rally, then the market catches on...you just made their point in a sense.
Technical and fundamental analysis looks to beat the weak and semistrong versions of the EMH by using public knowledge and the past to predict future pricing and market mispricings before the market catches on.
Technical and trend analysis has been right the whole way down from upper left to lower right on the chart for the last year.
Originally posted by: LegendKiller
Originally posted by: senseamp
So CEO of an insolvent bank says it's "profitable" and the market rallies 5% ?
Bear market rally, which is not to say some things like oil/commodities are not oversold.
It wasn't just that. Bringing back the uptick rule and reconsideration of FAS157 are pretty huge items.