I'm referring here - in very simple terms - to the huge difference between "enter a long trade when the fast MA crosses up above the slow MA" and "try to identify potential long entries from the price action and/or whatever else after the fast MA has crossed up above the slow MA".
Just my perspective ... (with which many, doubtless, will disagree: it was ever thus!).![]()
I use moving average only, it a great indicator and I am profitable using it.Does anyone use these? Anyone know whether any of them produce better results than just a buy and hold? Even if normally buy and hold is better, I would bet moving average systems would produce much lower drawdowns, particularly when the market is sky high like it is now. Seems like with a moving average, once the price starts to dip, you cover, and don't uncover again until maybe many percentage points more to the downside, thus hopefully missing the next bear market in large part.
I'm trying to read up on these, but most don't seem to be all that great off hand. Anyone have any thoughts?
Thanks!
I don't like "moving average crosses" of any stripe. They are 2nd derivatives of price. Any trader worth his salt should have "seen it" before the cross.
The concept of "Moving Average As Support/Resistance" has some validity, however.
Does anyone use these? Anyone know whether any of them produce better results than just a buy and hold? Even if normally buy and hold is better, I would bet moving average systems would produce much lower drawdowns, particularly when the market is sky high like it is now. Seems like with a moving average, once the price starts to dip, you cover, and don't uncover again until maybe many percentage points more to the downside, thus hopefully missing the next bear market in large part.
I'm trying to read up on these, but most don't seem to be all that great off hand. Anyone have any thoughts?
Thanks!
Does anyone use these? Anyone know whether any of them produce better results than just a buy and hold? Even if normally buy and hold is better, I would bet moving average systems would produce much lower drawdowns, particularly when the market is sky high like it is now. Seems like with a moving average, once the price starts to dip, you cover, and don't uncover again until maybe many percentage points more to the downside, thus hopefully missing the next bear market in large part.
I'm trying to read up on these, but most don't seem to be all that great off hand. Anyone have any thoughts?
Thanks!
Moving averages of whatever length or however calculated are still nothing but squiggly lines. It follows price up and over and down and around but price takes it own path where it will go regardless of whether a squiggly line is there or not.
though moving average are great for dynamic support and resistance, I use them to know the major direction of the price and also to find entry points.I always ignore them as dynamic support/resistance lines.