%%Linda Raschke probably provided the best summary of TA in this video clip.


If I wanted to also play games I'd post a chart for OP ... except I don't play such games.Better use of my time.
Certainly valid criticisms with one caveat, his opinion is based on his experience.
OHLC (price + time) + volume = market generated information.
How one parses that information whether it's through db tables, hand drawn lines, indicators, visual charts or fancy programming is much like a group of the blind touching various parts of an elephant and claiming only their particular experience is "the truth."
Confirmation bias is real. It will never sway a fixed position of opinion on the matter.
The only proof of it, whatever the "it" is, is through personal experience.
I dunno.. I don't think everyone would be able to post on that website. They must have some trustworthy background to be able to talk about it. Their points make sense to me, one after another.
What about Schwager's Market Wizards, some of whom swore by their own version of TA and made more money than the writer of the article ever dreamed of? Remember that TA is a generic term and encompasses a lot of BS along with some valid, basic concepts. I think most of the people who get lost in TA rabbit hole are mired in the crap part.I dunno.. I don't think everyone would be able to post on that website. They must have some trustworthy background to be able to talk about it. Their points make sense to me, one after another.
What about Schwager's Market Wizards, some of whom swore by their own version of TA and made more money than the writer of the article ever dreamed of? Remember that TA is a generic term and encompasses a lot of BS along with some valid concepts. I think most of the people who get lost in TA rabbit hole are mired in the crap part.
Please explain how confirmation bias affects proper statistics taken on written trading setup/and/trigger pairs. Additionally, for any shortcomings that you list, what would you say are some actions that can minimize those?Confirmation bias is real.