no worries - wasn't offended, just inquiring!
thanks. hence my issue with all the chartmasters on this site. Its really sad to see such hindsight blindness, i mean bias in full effect --trashing the minds of otherwise decent and reasonable folks. surf
Yes, surf, despite the random process, you really are in a trend.
Here's the proof:
Your first bet: $0
Toss # 1: heads ; Total win: $ 0 ; Your next bet: $0
Toss # 2: heads ; Total win: $ 0 ; Your next bet: $0
Toss # 3: heads ; Total win: $ 0 ; Your next bet: $2 on heads
Toss # 4: heads ; Total win: $ 2 ; Your next bet: $3 on heads
Toss # 5: heads ; Total win: $ 5 ; Your next bet: $4 on heads
Toss # 6: heads ; Total win: $ 9 ; Your next bet: $5 on heads
Toss # 7: heads ; Total win: $14 ; Your next bet: $6 on heads
Toss # 8: heads ; Total win: $20 ; Your next bet: $7 on heads
Toss # 9: heads ; Total win: $27 ; Your next bet: $8 on heads
Toss #10: heads ; Total win: $35 ; Your next bet: $9 on heads
Toss #11: tails ; Total win: $26 ; Your next bet: $0
So putting just $2 of your principal at risk in a timely fashion could've earned you $26.
That's the power of trading with the trend.
See above. If the trend is sufficiently long, it very obviously can be exploited. But most randomly generated trends are too short to be exploited profitably. And since you never know in advance which trends will be long, trying to exploit them all will make you a net loser.
What any of this has to do with the nonrandomly generated stock market, you've yet to explain.
I think you have made some great points in some posts, but I am not interested in battles or taking sides one way or the other. Like everyone I believe some things about trading and disbelieve others but never think I know everything. If charting works for some people - great. More power to them. I even use selected charts for some kinds of trading. I don't understand having an issue with any method or any characteristic (even if true) of other traders. The markets have done far more emotional damage to me that any thread comments have. If all traders agreed on everything, there would be no trading or markets IMO. LOL.
The twisted logic is all yours, dude. You're the one who brought up the ten heads in a row (at least a dozen times previously). I show how to exploit it and now you want to pretend it's just luck?? LMAO! That is just so sad.Man, this is really twisted logic--- but it's money management/ luckif you were able to profit from the coin flip nothing to do with trends. surf
Please tell me you're not assuming the markets are as random as coin flips.Actually, wouldn't a trend indicate something inefficient about a market? After all, something that is predictive, is not priced in to the current price!
This simple example has given me an idea for a new methodology and there is no TA involved in the idea. Thanks. I dealt with Martingale methods twenty years ago but there is always something new to learn by being open to other opinions.
Please tell me you're not assuming the markets are as random as coin flips.
But I think the word "correllelogram" does not exist.
The correlogram is a commonly used tool for checking randomness in a data set. This randomness is ascertained by computing autocorrelations for data values at varying time lags. If random, such autocorrelations should be near zero for any and all time-lag separations. If non-random, then one or more of the autocorrelations will be significantly non-zero.
Probably correlogram, a.k.a. autocorrelation plot in statistical analysis: