Quote from dtrader98:
All of these explanations are correct, particularly the preceding one. I think the expression you are thinking of, is to stay away from the tail ends of the bell curve.
The bell curve (like taco bell) is just a visual metaphor for a mathematical probability function, because when you graph it it looks like a bell. The events that are more likely to occur (like say a daily change of +/-1%) occur in the middle or fattest area of the curve. The outliers or tails are the smaller areas of the curve.
These are the unusual large changes that do not occur often; like an 87 style market drop. Although, in reality, markets do not exactly follow a bell curve, which is why IMO it's even worse than a bell curve would predict (that's why LTCM blew up).
<img src="http://elitetrader.com/vb/attachment.php?s=&postid=1520040" border="0" alt=""><br />
Perhaps he heard "avoid the bell curve" from someone who thought "pure random walk" when he said "bell curve" .... and as it is not possible to make profit from a pure random walk ... it should probably be better to avoid it ....
