Forgot to add... While markets may have a fractal nature I don't actually believe that you can predict anything with fractals.
Quote from ssrrkk:
Statistics are used to estimate population parameters from samples. Probabilities are assigned for inference, either for predicting future values or assigning confidence / significance for parameter estimates.
Bayesian inference is one way to equate past statistics with future probabilities.
In the context of statistical tests, I am referring to the case where probabilities are used to assign confidence or significance to the parameter estimates. So if your past statistics indicate that 80% of the time, a certain pattern resulted in a profitable upswing, then I would like to know what is the 95% confidence interval on that 80% statistic. If it is 80% +/- 40%, then I am less confident about betting on it. Alternatively I could come up with a hypothesis test and ask: is this 80% (profitable) significantly different from 50% (not profitable, money-losing with commission+slippage). The null hypothesis says it is indistinguishable from the 50% case. If the p-value from this test is 0.3, then that means that 30% of the time, you could have gotten the 80% by chance, i.e., that it is just a fluke, there is no mechanism behind it, or it is a curve-fit.
, Bayesian Inference sounds useful...have you applied it?Quote from CoolTraderDude:
Forgot to add... While markets may have a fractal nature I don't actually believe that you can predict anything with fractals.
Quote from phattails:
thanks for the links. From my limited understanding I would say, if anything, the market is multifractal, but then again this would be a more general discription and there are better and more complete statistical models that do a better job at explaining the data generating process.
I would also say that as far as predicting goes, as long as you can better predict the distribution (though unobervable) in the future, then you're able to better monetize market features.

Quote from intradaybill:
Here is an interesting pattern in SPY as of last close from the price action blog with one showing only in the history and zero showings in some other markets. The author tries to provide an explanation for that. Anyone else has one?
http://t.co/mEsKnNQw
Do you think this a a random pattern or it has some meaning?
Quote from Antisyzygy:
This thread is sort of dead but here is an interesting link.
http://www.bearcave.com/misl/misl_tech/wavelets/hurst/
Quote from intradaybill:
There are random trends and deterministic trends. The Hurst exponent cannot tell you which is which. This is the flaw. It is simple. I wonder why those people do not think of that before doing all that hard work.
Quote from vinc:
just by saying 'there are random trends and deterministic trends' it seems like you admit that you CAN TELL which is which and 'which is an illusion' .. how do you do that? if there wasn't a method one wouldn't be able to tell the difference between the two..In other words how do we know that 'There are random trends and deterministic trends' ? In the market that is..
Quote from vinc:
just by saying 'there are random trends and deterministic trends' it seems like you admit that you CAN TELL which is which and 'which is an illusion' .. how do you do that? if there wasn't a method one wouldn't be able to tell the difference between the two..In other words how do we know that 'There are random trends and deterministic trends' ? In the market that is..