Quote from Ditch:
economic theory is completely useless in understanding market action. markets are ruled by FEAR and GREED, not "sophisticated computers" and it will be that way until the human brain doesn't longer exist as we know it
Quote from Corso482:
Is finding an edge harder when the time frame is shorter? Or, in other words, are there fewer edges to be found in shorter time frames? Allow me to elaborate...
Finding an edge means finding a statistical inefficiency in the market. The trouble is that (1) the market is mostly efficient and (2) everyone and their mother is sitting around looking for the few inefficiencies left to exploit.
So, it can be said, therefore, that once the first problem is over come and you manage to find an inefficiency, the second problem is that others may also find the same inefficiency and arbitrage it away.
Am I right in thinking that the only reason inefficiencies exist, aside from people having not found them all, is because of smaller time frames existing within larger time frames? In other words, everything would be arbed away quickly if everyone traded the same time frame.
If that's the case, then the longer the time frame that one trades, the less likely it is that his edge will disappear because of the multiple time frames that exist within his timeframe.
Is this why daytrading is so hard? Not only are there fewer timeframes within your timeframe to help ward off the arbitraging of your edge, but also only full-time professional traders play the intraday timeframes, meaning the people you are trying to prevent from arbing your edge are that much more skilled at doing so.
If one follows this thinking, then daytrading will only get harder and eventually impossible as more and more sophisticated computers all compete for the same inefficiencies over the same short time frame. After all, couldn't one look at day trading as an activity geared toward making the market efficient? Well, if that's the case, then the better traders become, the more efficient the market will become and the harder it will be for them to make a living.
Quote from vladiator:
Sorry dude, but looks like your brain is useless if you make such claims. Economics theory can be very easily used to explain and predict the effects of fear/greed and the like. Read Prospect Theory.
Quote from daniel_m:
so all these professors customarily have a oh, say, 20, 30 ES contracts out while teaching their classes right? of course, they're not all that interested in the money, they really love the teaching, but hey, why not make a few hundred thousand a year on top with a few simple predictions right? it's child's play....
Quote from inandlong:
I have to disgaree with this brah. Unless you are defining the term statistical edge.
Too much is made of having an edge. Way too much is made of defining it statistically. And hoping to find an inefficiency etc etc, by now you must know that you can make statistics show whatever you want.... much the same as settings on an indicator.
Like larrybf does, why not try to find something that occurs again and again, perhaps even call it an efficiency, a normality, a common occurence? The market is full of these. Don't look for the esoteric, the unusual, the unique.
Quote from jem:
I find it interesting that people on the whole seem to accept the market efficiency hypothesis, and at the same time accept the theory that buy and hold is a legitimate money making strategy. Should not market efficiencies wipe out returns to investors?
Quote from vladiator:
having read the first paragraph, didn't even wanna read the rest...
No, they shouldn't, unless you meant "abnormal returns," which is not what buy-and-holders are after. The buy and holders merely try to get the normal 10% or so equity return annually.
No BS.
Quote from daniel_m:
that's right vlad. hire your monkies and hand em the darts folks, it's time to go portfolio pickin...
let's just have a quick look at the lucrative returns promised to the index buy and holders:
buy SP500 Jan '62 @ 70
sell SP500 Jan '82 @ 120
throw in a generous estimate of a 4% dividend and you've got a smashing return of....wait for it.....6.7%pa woohoo!
but wait -- let's factor in inflation for the period, which was 5.5% pa, and you've got yourself a meaty return of 1.2%!
what does EMH tell us again? no one can outperform the indices for any 'signifcant period of time'?
well, i don't know about you, but i'd consider 20 years a 'significant period of time'.
therefore, it was humanly impossible to achieve a return better than 1.2% pa from 1962 - 1982.