Quote from MAESTRO:
All it says that if you flip a fair coin and create a random walk out of the multiple flips you will have a chart that is based on a normally (Gaussian) distributed data. It has been proven beyond any doubts that no matter what tactic you would use to trade this chart you guarantee not to win (and not to lose either with the exception of commissions and Bid/Ask spreads). The only way to make money on the markets (aside being a broker or a bank) is by relaying on the market inefficiencies. Those inefficiencies exhibit themselves as stable differences between the normally distributed data and the data that has ânon-randomnessâ built in to it. Once those inefficiencies are recognized and extracted they have a tendency to be âarbed outâ of the market. It is incredibly hard to find any âstableâ inefficiency. So, majority of people do not bother to check whether their TA tools really can find those market inefficiencies (differences between the normally distributed data and the distribution skews) or not. That is why when I was dealing with Bank of America back in 2007 the first test they asked me to perform is to show what would happen to my methods if they are exposed to totally artificially created, random data. Any TA indicator, any chart tool anything at all must be tested against those conditions. If they work the same way on normally distributed, random data as they do on real charts that simply mean that those tools are no good at all. Only when it has been thoroughly proven that there is noticeable difference between their reactions to different data origins you can accept those tools as being genuinely efficient. Unfortunately 99.9% of all known to me TA methods and tools fail this test.
Cheers,
MAESTRO
DO you know of any practical way to play around with this. Would there be a place some where on this web with a chart based on randomness vs a market chart, built in would be the ability to add a moving average and such TA's
I know its a long shot, the important stuff is always missing.
