Quote from alphav6O3q:
Well..you cannot prevent people from trading on technicals. What you can do is put guidelines which would encourage trading based more on fundamentals rather than technicals.
Some of them would be
a)minimum hold time of say 1 week or more. If you reduce the hold time too much you risk making price non-informative. However I dont believe having hold times of a day or so will make price very non-informative.
b)remove decimalization and have have 1 tick ~ 1$. Here too may be some study has to be done to determine the optimum tick value.
c)ban short selling. Normal buying and selling pressure should be sufficient to make price informative.
Professional trading at present is more akin to professional gambling rather than investing. Investing and trading have just 1 commonality: you are buying and selling.
I think there are 2 or more reasons why trading hasnt been banned and probably wont be in future
a)there are really smart traders in wall street, and they know how to extract money from the system very well. Because they have so much money their power over wall street is more than any body else in the market place. And since they make so much money from the current system they are never going to agree to change the current system.
b)because trading and investing are based on buy low and selling high, there maybe some difficulty in distinguishing between them from a regulatory viewpoint.
Occupy wall street was in my opinion a good movement in that direction. However I dont think the people there even understand how much broken the wall street system currently is. We need a much stronger/more informed movement to overcome the interests of the top 1% or so.
As far as mutual funds go, if you are trying to trade for 2.7 months purely based on technicals good luck.