Quote from Specterx:
This isn't so. Just think about it: as more people crowd into the trade and try to get long on the same signal, the bounce becomes sharper and the divergence becomes less pronounced.

Quote from Pekelo:
1. Then how come that this strategy still works after decades?
2. Not everybody uses it thus just because lots of people have the same opinion and get long, lots of others can have the opposite opinion based on something else thus they get short.
3. Even if your scenario worked, after the strategy stops working because what you just described, people would abandone it, thus it should start to work again.
(we could say it is cyclical)

Quote from Specterx:
I don't know from my own experience that DB with MACD divergence is an edge, but I'll take your word for it![]()

Quote from Pekelo:
I don't think anybody has mentioned yet but giving away an edge can actually strengthen the idea.
Let's say double bottom with RSI divergence. The more people use it to go long, the better it works. So it is a fallacy to think that more people using the same strategy automaticly destroys it...
Quote from Z.O.G.:
Holy crap. Where does that Jack Hershey guy find the time to write those book-length responses? Does anybody actually read all that stuff? :eek:
Quote from Pekelo:
I don't think anybody has mentioned yet but giving away an edge can actually strengthen the idea.
Let's say double bottom with RSI divergence. The more people use it to go long, the better it works. So it is a fallacy to think that more people using the same strategy automaticly destroys it...