As someone who uses both fundamental and chart for trading, I feel sick when I see this kind of debate.
Debating what is random; or isn't random, first requires that everyone is on the same page as to the definition of random.
If everyone is using a different definition, then it's possible everyone is correct.
This is a classic case of A Tale Of Two Cities.
The swing traders among us need to worry about fundamentals whereas for the day traders, not important or not even relevant when the holding period is minutes.
=> Assuming that fundamentals in the form of intraday NEWS is not important ....
An Esp big assumption wrt unscheduled NEWS
Intraday liquidity can vanish quickly
Good point-- intraday news, tweets, fed speaking are all sources of randomness for daytrading... which is why I use automated OTO trailing or hard stops every time I trade.
It depends on holding period.When I entered, it was about one being better than the other.
Somehow, it became one is useless.
My position is that both can be utilized; it all depends on the trading system/goals. But if someone had to choose only one approach, I would choose T/A over F/A. How 'bout you?
For example, one could use F/A to narrow down a universe of stocks; then enter and exit from that subset using T/A. There are billions of possibilities.
I just wanted to clarify ... my position, at least.
1. Do you think markets are truly random?
2. If something is truly random, how do you make money with it?
The reason I bring this up is that I've heard a lot of options trading gurus out there recently talk about how markets are random and therefore when you trade options, IV trades rich to actual and that's your edge. The numbers will eventually play out.
But if something is truly random how do you make money with it?