Why does TA not work (for you)?

You say private info is insider info (used to make insider trades/illegal activities) right?

If so, why would it be mentioned in an article dealing with TECHNICAL ANALYSIS, concerning past price data? It would be irrelevant.

Fact is, you are confused. Or, you are obfuscating. Either way, you are incorrect.

Quote from marketsurfer:

Absolutely not-- private information has nothing to do with analytic techniques. You are just joking with me, right??
 
Quote from hoodooman:

HERE IS MY RECORD SINCE AUG 2.


DATE MKOP T= W/L WIN%
8-2 UP 1.5 27/3 90%
8-3 UP 1.5 18/1 95%
8-6 DWN 1.0 18/1 95%
8-7 UP 1.5 35/8 81%
8-8 DWN 1.5 47/1 98%
8-9 DWN 1.0 24/2 92%
8-10 DWN 1.0 25/1 96%
8-13 DWN 2.0 33/0 100%
8-14 UP 2.0 37/1 97%
8-15 DWN 2.0 34/1 97%
8-16 UP 2.0 35/2 94%

REGARDS


I see your record and raise you my record:

HERE IS MY RECORD SINCE AUG 2.


DATE MKOP T= W/L WIN%
8-2 UP 1.5 27/3 100%
8-3 UP 1.5 38/1 100%
8-6 DWN 1.0 18/1 99%
8-7 UP 1.5 35/8 100%
8-8 DWN 1.5 47/1 99%
8-9 DWN 1.0 60/2 99%
8-10 DWN 1.0 55/1 100%
8-13 DWN 2.0 30/0 100%
8-14 UP 2.0 67/1 100%
8-15 DWN 2.0 39/1 99%
8-16 UP 2.0 75/2 100%

REGARDS
 
Quote from marketsurfer:

How many moves or series of moves in one direction increase the odds that the next move or series will be in the same direction?

Tudor Jones-- LOL. He was over a year wrong with his supposed 87 crash call with charts

From Victor Niederhoffer:

</b>Victor: Any trend that exists can be quantified and its departure from randomness can be measured with the usual statistical procedures, such as confidence intervals and likelihoods. Serial correlation coefficients, regression coefficients of current changes versus past changes, and magnitudes of the impact of past moving averages on the future, distributions of the length of runs, the correllelogram, the expected waiting times between peaks and valleys, survival statistics. All these techniques are very good at discovering any non-random elements.

To join a proper debate, such measures must be quantified for various markets and various times, and the degree of uncertainty and departure from randomness must be ascertained. I have never found a movement in prices that anyone could make money with by a trend following method that didn&#65533;t also show a major departure from randomness revealed by the standard statistical measures I mentioned. The tragedy is the mysticism and blind acceptance of trendism, that trend following exponents proclaim, without any evidence as to magnitude and uncertainty. No self-reported results that selected individuals or leaders might have made in the past shed light on the debate.

Dave: Your well known saying, &#65533;If it can be tested, it must be tested&#65533; comes into play here . Exactly what testing have you done to prove the above idea?

Victor: These tests can readily be performed My group of colleagues performs these tests maybe 2-3 thousand times a year over different markets and time frames. Those of a cognitive bent and those with their feet on the ground are always open to the existence of trends, but they test them with the best statistical methods existing. If you apply these tests to stock market moves, you will find that all such tests show negative serial correlation. In fact, they indicate a tendency for reversal.

Dave: What about the upward bias in stock prices? Why cant that be interpreted as a trend?

Victor: Well, all proper statistical tests take into account this upward drift. They would look for serial correlations over and above the basic drift of the market. One of the other market cons is the permanent bearishness of some of market pundits, and I am the last person to say that this upward drift, evidenced over the last 200 years, does not exist. This in no way refutes, but it does refine the statistical tests required for the stock market. However, I hasten to add that no such upward drift exists in any other market. </b>

Any questions?



surf surf


Let's see, Neiderhoffer blew out twice losing all his clients money. Out of the hedge fund biz.

Tudor runs Billions of dollars and has had consistent great results for a long time. Still in the biz.

Who do I want to listen to?
 
Quote from hoodooman:

After all these posts, is anyone on the side of marketsurfer? Seriously, I just can't keep up with the dialog.

The line in Vegas on the over/under of number of people on here who side with him is 2. The under is a lock.
 
Quote from marketsurfer:

Absolutely not-- private information has nothing to do with analytic techniques. You are just joking with me, right??

Look, you can't just define words and terms to fit your predisposed notions.

What do you think the financial models of a hedge fund are? They are "private information" assets. The theoretical question of interest to academic researchers is whether or not the creation of these assets actually enables one to outperform the market. If you are a strong-EMH proponent, you would say "no", regardless of whether the "private information" is some retail guy's rules for using a stochastic indicator or if they are the life's work of a University of Chicago Finance Ph.D.

If the author's of the paper YOU linked meant "private information" in the sense of "insider information", why would they have mentioned that the "private information" in question consisted of a "Bayesian probability model applied to past market data"?

Is a Bayesian probability model "insider information"? Do you ever hear of someone being prosecuted for having a Bayesian probability model? No, of course you don't. Do you think that maybe the authors would have used a different example if they were talking about what you insist they were talking about? Like maybe said "traders who had access to corporate insiders" or "trader who had relatives working for the company" or "female traders sleeping with one of the corporation's top managers"? It's two completely different kinds of information. That you can't understand this distinction is mind-boggling at this point. I would expect someone with an IQ of even as low as 90 to get this distinction without having to have it explained again and again. Is your IQ above 90?

Just forget it, man. I can tell by the responses I'm getting that other people reading get it. That you don't is irrelevant to me at this point.
 
Quote from logic_man:

...

Just forget it, man. I can tell by the responses I'm getting that other people reading get it. That you don't is irrelevant to me at this point.

don't you think you're taking this waaay too seriously?
 
Quote from HurricaneUS:

don't you think you're taking this waaay too seriously?

I think it's a serious thing to meet the world's densest man i.e. marketsurfer. It doesn't happen every day that someone links to a paper to attempt to prove his point and ends up doing the exact opposite, then insists he's done nothing of the sort.

That kind of stupidity needs to be studied in the hopes of keeping it confined, especially since it clearly can't be reasoned with.
 
It's gotta be a defense mechanism. He's entrenched himself so deeply in what he believes to be true that his mind must deflect any rational argument against those beliefs for fear of a total cranial meltdown :)

Quote from logic_man:

I think it's a serious thing to meet the world's densest man i.e. marketsurfer. It doesn't happen every day that someone links to a paper to attempt to prove his point and ends up doing the exact opposite, then insists he's done nothing of the sort.

That kind of stupidity needs to be studied in the hopes of keeping it confined, especially since it clearly can't be reasoned with.
 
Quote from logic_man:

I think it's a serious thing to meet the world's densest man i.e. marketsurfer. It doesn't happen every day that someone links to a paper to attempt to prove his point and ends up doing the exact opposite, then insists he's done nothing of the sort.

That kind of stupidity needs to be studied in the hopes of keeping it confined, especially since it clearly can't be reasoned with.


Hilarious.


But it has to be confined.......................right? Hopefully the department of disease control put Surf in a plastic bubble.
 
Back
Top