Perfect TA...

UM_manager,

I think the concept of price tracking is viable, but prefer to do that on a finer interval using PDE's instead of NN's.

Like this:
 

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Quote from UM_manager:

Greetings, guys!
Thanks all of you for answers. Even for such, as the latest one. I think, that my idea has interested some of you. I suggest to not transform this thread into a garbage can of dirty words.
Tell me fairly, whether you thought of the market in a similar way earlier? Whether you sometime saw a similar method in books?

I work with a similar method. Regions, definitely, statistics, definitely. So far I have never traded it but if it is profitable I will not be selling the signals. :D
 
can you give examples of algo's you use? Show us something more than pretty charts and results

and statistically speaking, shouldn't the error increase as the prediction moves further into the future? Your upper and lower limits look very parallel
 
It is your choice, maxpi. But other guys give recommendations absolutely free of charge. It's their choice..

Hi, nbates!
I tried to use PDEs and correlations, but NNs have proved to be much better. On one of stages of my algorithm the value calculated by means of NN is used as a parameter.

SwingOutOn5! Of course, "error increases as the prediction moves further into the future", pics show it!
 
Quote from MAESTRO:

"If price movements were predictable then markets would not exist"

Isaac Newton, 1699

"If price movements were predictable to everybody then markets would not exist"

"If price movements were predictable to a small group of traders then markets would still exist"

Spike500, 2005



:D
 
Quote from spike500:
"If price movements were predictable to everybody then markets would not exist"

"If price movements were predictable to a small group of traders then markets would still exist"
Spike500, 2005
:D
Amen.
:)
 
Quote from MAESTRO:

"If price movements were predictable then markets would not exist"

Isaac Newton, 1699

Apparently I guess he probably said this after he lost a fortune in the tulip market craze?
 
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