Well, I guess back to the bat cave. LOL.
Mav, no long debates now, rugby season and I don't even trade Friday's anymore, unless I'm taking a position or closing something.
I considered the random walk hypothesis, and rejected it. I believe markets are efficient on average, but there are periodic inefficiencies that can be exploited.
If the markets are totally random, there would not be predictable trends. I've provided a couple of papers to Surf that demonstrated the existence of trends. They should still be around.
Trends happen because of a change in fundamentals, either actual or perceived, leading to a repricing of assets. I will grant that the change, regardless of whether actual or perceived, precipitates an imbalance in the markets, and the search for equilibrium moves price.
I understand your point about drift, but there is also a behavioural aspect to pricing that transcends drift caused by interest rates or cost of carry. I know you will agree the forward curve is also about perception of future supply and demand, but many reading this would benefit from understanding that point.
To me a 5 minute chart is noise, but many here believe they can see short term imbalances and exploit them profitably. I'm not going to argue that, there are many ways to skin a cat and the biggest idiots on ET are the ones who insist there is only one way to do things, their way.
Let me give you a few instances to illustrate my point about trends. When BoJ launched their version of QE, USD.JPY went from circa 105 (I got in 106+) to about 121 or 122. That was a trend due to repricing of the Yen. There was nothing random then.
Just this week the RBA revised inflation expectations downwards, that led to a quick repricing of the Aussie. I entered after the fact, I think I'm up over a hundred pips. Nothing random.
FOMC announcements, if contrary to popular belief, lead to repricing of treasuries and precious metals.
The same thing happens with earnings announcements, outlook guidance, WASDE Reports, GDP data, and so on, endlessly.
If you have someone who is trading the ES or CL every single day, then they are trying to spot momentary imbalances and exploit them. I have no doubt some are very successful doing this, I can't.
Genuine asset repricing, even if just because cheap money is seeking the best return, causes trends that can be exploited. It does require patience, but it is there.
So no, I don't believe markets are random.
For the rest of it, if one doesn't understand probabilities and risk, it will be a pretty short career.
There was also a question about the 30D NLs. Not to make a long story longer, if I am sitting in front of the screens for the day looking for short term trades, the 5D NLs and especially the derivatives dictate what I do. An overextended market can yield something counter trend, and my 5D NL derivatives are better than any oscillator at predicting that.
Has anyone looked at a 3D NL and derivatives to flag day trades? I'm considering evaluating that.