I am actively trading every day and use fundamental equity research. Among my peer group of traders, analysts, and portfolio managers, technicals are not seen as a serious or useful tool.A trader and investor aren't even necessarily related. I have not seen one person on these boards who is an ACTIVE DAY TRADER and says they use fundamentals as their primary tool. It's so ridiculous, haven't even seen someone try and pretend that they do that. If you're looking to make a career out of active day trading, than it isn't even a conversation. TA is by far the more consistent and profitable path.
Based on 25 years of conversations with many traders and quant hedge fund people I can safely say technical analysis provides a large body of very strong trading and market prediction ideas that many quant hedge funds consider all the time
How it that?That’s fair, but what you’re not getting is that the basis for technical analysis — that it is predictive of future flow or price — is wrong, unless you believe other retail traders like you drive a stocks price through a day, overtime, etc. In real life, retail day traders make up a fraction of dollar value trading, which means price impact is minimal (except pink sheet stocks etc.).
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Yup amazin' how so many ignorantly lump drawing lines and stares at charts, that us sophisticated folks don't use, with all that encompasses TA. Much of what they do in fact use.Momentum strategies are very common and broadly used, and purely technical.
Funny you mention that. Just read this morning:-...
Just like how small-time home flippers can get in front of Zillow and blackrock…
The point of TA is to piggyback on the activity of institutions, so why would institutions use TA in any major way?
The point of TA is to piggyback on the activity of institutions, so why would institutions use TA in any major way?