Search results

  1. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Not quite logical. "All publicly available information and techniques are effectively already in the market price, because there's no way for the individual trader to reliably compete against the resources and access of the collective competition including the bigger players." The...
  2. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    What is a reliable method that can be applied to past price action to determine a usefully large positive or negative number d such that (p1-p0)>=d, where p0 is the current market price and p1 will be the market price in the near future? I'm looking for your answer to be posted here in plain...
  3. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Sounds good. First you tell me how to posit a proof without making an assertion.
  4. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Yeah, there's a Gilligan's Island rerun about something like that.
  5. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Okay.
  6. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Your fantasy life doesn't interest me.
  7. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    I did so already. Now pick up the ball and run with it.
  8. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Agreed, the criterion of "publicly available" is not essential to the concept.
  9. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    All publicly available information and techniques are effectively already in the market price, because there's no way for the individual trader to reliably compete against the resources and access of the collective competition including the bigger players.
  10. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    There is no such system. This one calls for more math and less "magic."
  11. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Congratulations on your success. What I'm looking for is a formulation of method aside from the luck that keeps the rare practitioner of an essentially random system from going broke.
  12. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    What is a reliable, publicly available method that can be applied to past price action to determine a usefully large positive or negative number d such that (p1-p0)>=d, where p0 is the current market price and p1 will be the market price in the near future? I'm looking for your answer to be...
  13. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    The question is now substantively in its final form.
  14. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Do you have an improvement to suggest?
  15. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    And now a restatement of the challenge question as consolidated from several posts: What is a reliable, publicly available method that can be applied to past price action to determine a usefully large positive or negative number d such that (p1-p0)>=d, where p0 is the current market price and...
  16. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Hey you, one of the so-far-above-the-foolishness-of-it-all. After your previous retreat, maybe you have rested and are up to the following: What is a reliable, publicly available method that can be applied to past price action to determine a usefully large positive or negative number d such...
  17. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Who answered and what are the page numbers?
  18. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Limited edition "Freak Out" version: What is a reliable, publicly available method that can be applied to past price action to determine a usefully large positive or negative number d such that (p1-p0)>=d, where p0 is the current market price and p1 will be the market price in the near...
  19. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    Perhaps you have a smart response to the question in my previous post.
  20. N

    trend following delusion shattered

    New and improved version: What is a reliable method, composed entirely of publicly available techniques, that can be applied to past price action to determine a usefully large positive or negative number d such that (p1-p0)>=d, where p1 is a near-future price and p0 is the current market...
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