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From: | "Mike Beal" <mike.beal@amb.co.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 20 Jul 2000 23:11:28 +1200 |
How to wind up traders...
From the Motley Fool:
Behaviours that are intermittently rewarded are the
most persistent - thus the success of the myopic science of technical
analysis. Completely ignorant of the actual business dynamics represented
by the company behind the ticker, the technical analyst relies on charts of past
price movement that he swears foretell future stock appreciation.
It's much like driving a car by looking in the rearview mirror.
Nonetheless, technical analysts are occasionally right.
The problem is they are right on an intermittent
basis. Which means they develop a learned response that becomes darn near
impossible to distinguish. All kinds of justifications, ranging from the
sublime to the ridiculous, are given for why past performance determines future
stock appreciation - in spite of the fact that Malkiel's tremendous book A
Random Walk Down Wall Street clearly proved that no chart pattern had any
predictive value above and beyond what was possible through pure chance.
Even technical analysts will admit their 'science' is really more art than
system, saying that experience informs the reading of charts.
Keep on getting those intermittent pellets
traders.
Excellent book by the way (A Random Walk Down Wall
Street).
Mike.
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