Quote from MAESTRO:
Dear all, once again, could we please stick to discussing the topic of this thread which is RANDOMNESS at large. I promise we would all gain if we try to stay focused.
Of course.
The market isn't random. Its a chaotic system. I.e. it is a highly nonlinear system that has feedback loops which exist sometimes and other times seem to not exist. These sort of systems appear random, but are not.
The issue is that human beings are not always rational. They act inconsistently many times, however sometimes they act together when they get scared, or confident. Then you have groups of humans in corporations, or banks, or investment firms acting as one unit which also drive prices. The problem is that no human is the same as the next, and no human group is the same as the next, and human beings drive the market. Furthermore, not every human being has the same information at any given time, and even if they were totally rational it would be impossible to duplicate eachothers actions.
If you were to model the universe and the minds of human beings you would be able to completely predict the market's move.
The best way to look at the market is using nonlinear dynamics paired with probability and statistics. This is also known as "chaos theory". Most traders are on the "Fractal" side today, however I actually believe this is the best starting point in spite of having limited concrete evidence myself. Empirically, you can look at any timeframe in the market and if you ignore the time-stamps or make it so you can't see what timeframe you are in, you cannot tell the difference many times between 1 minute timeframe and 1 day timeframe. This is a symptom of the market being "fractal".
Take a look at Fractal dimension indicators. As the dimension approaches 1.5 the signal approaches the same measure of dimension as total randomness. As a signal approaches a fractal dimension of 1 they tend to be trending, and as a signal approaches a fractal dimension of 2 it tends to by cyclic.
Check out this link for a good basic starting point :
http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/psychology/cogsci/chaos/workshop/Fractals.html
Then check out this book for theory that will help you understand the market scientifically :
http://www.amazon.com/Fractal-Geome...dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1
