Fair enough. I suppose that's where caution can pay off. Regardless of whether a trader is employing either basic or sophisticated analytical methods, he is still, as you noted, guessing. And I would think that where guessing and leverage go hand in hand, they are best tempered with caution. We all know that the key to trading is survival. If we can survive our mistakes, then we at least have a chance of prospering.Quote from Pa(b)st Prime:
...adapting to new environments is important but it's still random as to if we're adapting to something that hasn't really changed. In other words if I'm a tend follower and I say, "this isn't working anymore I'm changing stripes" it's STILL random as to whether trendiness reappears or not. I'm still guessing.
I read somewhere that there are more skydiving accidents that result from experts taking aggressive risks than from novices running into trouble. (I don't know how the numbers relate proportionately.) This notion may well apply to our fallen Wizards. Perhaps they approached changing conditions a little too confidently or not at all.
I realize that the dots can be connected in any manner of ways after the fact. I'm just putting it out there as a possibility. As I noted in an earlier post, I am certainly not dismissing your notion of randomness. I just think that there may also be other factors at play.
