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From: | "David" <davida@wave.co.nz> |
Date: | Fri, 25 May 2001 15:39:46 +1200 |
Well put. David -----Original Message----- From: owner-sharechat@sharechat.co.nz [mailto:owner-sharechat@sharechat.co.nz]On Behalf Of Lyall Taylor Sent: Friday, 25 May 2001 3:09 PM To: sharechat@sharechat.co.nz Subject: Re: Re: [sharechat] Fundamentals vs Technicals I find it quite bewildering that people are adopting a 'head to head' approach of comparing these two alternatives. For a start, it the the context, appropriateness, and method of implementation of these stratiges that ultimately decides the success or failure of the method, not the method itself. There is a lot of bias going on with regard the supporting or rejection of these methods, yet people are arguing from quite different perspectives. Here are my views: There is no disputing that for evaluating long term investments, fundamental analysis is the way to go. As Buffett often asserts, a company's share price can only out-perform or under-perform its fundamentals for so long. In the long run, the company's financial performance will ultimately determine its share price performance. Hence, using technical analysis for long term investment appraisal is useless. In the short term however, share prices are not driven by the fundamentals, but by emotions, including fear, greed, herd mentality, and expections. Using fundamental analysis for short term trading is about as sensible as using charts to evaluate long term investments. Because the short term price has no correlation to the fundamentals, it is obviously an inadequate trading method. Charts help to determine the market's mood, and short term opinion of a stock, and helps them ride the volitile waves and hopefully generate good short term gains. The problem with the current argument is that everyone is bias towards their own method. Most fundamentalists are long term investors, and most traders are chartists. Neither is wrong - they utilise the most appropriate technique for their investments style. Apples with apples guys! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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