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From: | "hugh webber" <hugh.webber@clear.net.nz> |
Date: | Sun, 2 Dec 2001 12:21:14 +1300 |
well I have to say I haven't read Mary's article yet (I read some of the later posts first and I was wondering who "Mary" was - whether Mary Buffett had temporaily lost her marbles. Now that I read the quote I think its a grave misinterpretation to say that Mary has gone over to "technical analysis". All she's doing is looking at past hard data illustrated as a graph - it could equally well be columns of data showing the same thing. The leaps of blind faith she doesn't make - all the mumbo jumbo of 'head and shoulders' & graphs. A simple illustration - its been warm in Chch the last 3 days. If I drew a graph I could then point out that its trend line shows its going to get warmer but in fact a dirty great front swans in from over the Tasman and we get a dose of snow. Similarly for shares - maybe CAH shows a slowly improving shareprice so some people dive into it. However the prices of competing products in plastic, concrete, steel, aluminium, and wood from South America then cut it off at the knees and it collapses. But a value investor wouldn't have been exposed because they would have done their homework, read Buffetology and realised that CAH is in a commodity market with competition nearly completely on price and no or low barriers to entry. So they wouldn't have invested. Instead they would have cast around for Buffett type stocks - Auckland Airport is the most obvious one - but there are others.... ---------- > From: Viewpoint . <viewpoint_@hotmail.com> > To: sharechat@sharechat.co.nz > Subject: [sharechat] Mary is into TA > Date: Saturday, 1 December 2001 6:47 > > After the furore a few weeks ago I note that Mary Holm has taken up > technical analysis. > > Obviously when it suits technical analysis is a powerful tool. Interesting > column of hers today in the Herald and again i think she has been sucked in > by what fund managers have convinced her. > > Here is what she said - > > I've got graphs of returns on US shares since 1845, and on UK shares since > 1869. > > They wobble around a fair bit, but the trend lines are strongly upward. I > doubt if there's ever been a 10-year period when returns declined, let alone > a 14-year period. > > And I don't see why a 150-year trend should change now. > > > > > _________________________________________________________________ > Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- > To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at > http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/ > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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