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From: | Phaedrus <Phaedrus@techemail.com> |
Date: | Fri, 12 Apr 2002 20:48:07 -0700 (PDT) |
Snoopy, You have made some astonishing statements that I would like to refute :- <<<< "... if you have a share that steadily increases in value over many years, with very little oscillation about an upward share price line that keeps going up you would be a fool to trade it. You will be worse off if you trade it short term. You will be worse off if you trade it medium term and you will be worse off if you trade it long term. This is the case with RBD." >>>>> A steady increase in value? You must be joking. RBD is still below its issue price, almost 5 years after listing. Very little oscillation about an upward share price line that keeps going up? Huh? Not on my chart. <<< "The market doesn't get too many surprises and consequently share price volatility is low." >>> Low!!!! This stock dropped from $2.65 to 64 cents in just over a year!! Since then it has more than tripled its value in just over three years! I'd hate to see a stock that you claimed had high volatility! <<<< "Why would you trade RBD when there are far more volatile shares about that you can do far better with (if you are a trader)"? >>>> Because it has acceptable fundamentals, good volume, good clear trends and good volatility. Snoopy, as an advocate of the rewards of buying stocks on their fundamentals, and then holding them regardless, you could hardly have chosen a worse example than RBD. It has been a high risk, poor return longterm investment, at one stage losing about 70% of its value. Many longterm investors that eschew TA generally, make use of one particular tool - a 200 day moving average. This is plotted on the chart below. Note how it keeps you out of long downtrends, keeps you in long uptrends, and only gave 3 trades in five years. 3 trades that would have turned $10,000 into $24,000. "You will be worse off if you trade it long term. This is the case with RBD." Wrong! Look at the numbers - see where buying and holding got you. Yes, I know, I have ignored dividends and the 1:12 bonus issue in March 2000, but it is still no contest. TA need not be complicated, or lead to overtrading. The attached chart shows just how simple it can be. The use of slightly more sophisticated trend indicators gives results that are far superior to those quoted. It was only with the greatest of difficulty that I was able to refrain from adding them. <<< "Not all shares are suitable for trading. >>> I'd have to agree with you on that one! Regards, Phaedrus. _____________________________________________________________ Are you a Techie? Get Your Free Tech Email Address Now! Visit http://www.TechEmail.com _____________________________________________________________ Run a small business? Then you need professional email like you@yourbiz.com from Everyone.net http://www.everyone.net?tag
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