Just to clarify my first post:
I never meant to imply that lag is a good thing or even an inconsequential thing. Too much lag is a very bad thing. But there is an attitude prevalent among the indicator haters that even the slightest lag is detrimental. This is nonsense.
If you are a trend trader and your indicator (say, a moving average) is strongly lagging during heavy chop, this would be a good thing. The lag will keep you from being whipsawed by the chop. On the other hand, during a strong trend, the lag will get you late signals. Not good. There is a middle ground where some lag is at least tolerable because it does mitigate some chop while still allowing you to catch most of a trend.
My point is that bar-by-bar PA is difficult and some reference to the recent past is necessary to validate most trading signals.
The main problem with most public indicators isn't lag, it's poor design. They just don't do very well (or at all) what their creators claim they do. The best indicators with very few exceptions are proprietary.
You don't need 20 different hammers to drive a nail. But there are at least 20 different technical indicators all claiming to do the same thing: find a trend. Clearly most of them are doing a pisspoor job, which is why new ones are always being invented. For the public. Most of the proprietary indicators are already getting the job done.
I never meant to imply that lag is a good thing or even an inconsequential thing. Too much lag is a very bad thing. But there is an attitude prevalent among the indicator haters that even the slightest lag is detrimental. This is nonsense.
If you are a trend trader and your indicator (say, a moving average) is strongly lagging during heavy chop, this would be a good thing. The lag will keep you from being whipsawed by the chop. On the other hand, during a strong trend, the lag will get you late signals. Not good. There is a middle ground where some lag is at least tolerable because it does mitigate some chop while still allowing you to catch most of a trend.
My point is that bar-by-bar PA is difficult and some reference to the recent past is necessary to validate most trading signals.
The main problem with most public indicators isn't lag, it's poor design. They just don't do very well (or at all) what their creators claim they do. The best indicators with very few exceptions are proprietary.
You don't need 20 different hammers to drive a nail. But there are at least 20 different technical indicators all claiming to do the same thing: find a trend. Clearly most of them are doing a pisspoor job, which is why new ones are always being invented. For the public. Most of the proprietary indicators are already getting the job done.
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