have you ever read "Trendiness Report"

Trendiness Report starting Jan. 1996 ending Dec. 2005
at least 10 days in the trend

1. Mini Value Line
2. Nikkei Index
3. 90 Day T-Bill
4. Short Sterling
5. Japanese Yen
6. Palladium
7. Fed Funds
8. Australian Dollar
9. Goldman Sachs C.I.
10. Soybean Meal
11. British Pound
12. Platinum
13. CRB Futures
14. Euro
15. Pork Bellies
16. Swiss Franc
17. Dollar Index
18. Corn
19. Lumber
20. Eurodollars
21. Gold
22. NYSE Comp.
23. KC Wheat
24. Mexican Peso
25. Soybeans
26. Natural Gas
27. Cocoa
28. Feeder Cattle
29. Oats
30. Canadian Dollar
31. Orange Juice
32. Muni Bonds
33. Minn Wheat
34. Heating Oil #2
35. Copper
36. S&P 400 Midcap
37. Live Hogs
38. Rough Rice
39. T-notes
40. Unleaded Gas
41. Crude Oil
42. Russell 2000
43. Live Cattle
44. Soybean Oil
45. Cotton #2
46. Sugar #11
47. Silver
48. Wheat
49. Dax Index
50. Emini Nasdaq
51. T-bonds
52. S&P 500
53. German Bund
54. Coffee
55. Nasdaq 100
56. 5 YR T-Notes
57. Long Gilt Bond
58. FTSE 100 Index
59. Dow Jones Index
60. 10 YR T-Notes
61. Emini S&P 500
 
Quote from robinxing:

I wonder how to compare trendiness of these symbols?

is there any indicator?
=================

Yes, several ways to do it;
50 dma , with 10 years or more of data is fine also.

Like to Look at high to low %/low to high/patterns......
QQQQ $120 hi/ downtrended to 2o area,
SPY $150 area to 75 area.

Must be longer term trends chart you gave ;
J Yen has made some very sloppy moves/gaps , glad wasnt swing/position trading that.So ones personality had to like it also

However QQQQ makes some wide swings , not preferable to some

Not sure how they figured S&P 400 excells others;
but thats fine, cause didnt like it as much.:cool:
 
And that list looks partly like it was compled by an editor, more than a trader, ranking lumber/porkbellies as ''trendy'' in a practical sense could be hogwash.
 
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