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From: | " Hans van der Voorn" <vandervoorn@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Fri, 11 Oct 2002 13:54:35 +1300 |
Phaedrus, I thought that a double top would be confirmed when the index went below 2860, and was expecting that to be a significant bearish signal. I follow various technical commentators on the US and UK indices, most of whom have been very bearish on US indices in particular, confirmed head and shoulders patterns, Elliot waves etc. My interest was in seeing if the All Ords is likely to follow suit. I used to think that TA was akin to voodoo or astrology but in following the arguments for the last year or so the techies seemed to have been predicting the outcomes fairly acccurately. I subscribe to various services from a UK site called Hemscott (www.hemscott.net). They have one called Hemscott Analyst where they pick various undervalued stocks, mostly small caps. The reports are prepared by a fundamentalist. Typically they do a fundamental analysis on a stock with a good story, low PEG, good cash flows etc. This would be accompanied by a techical analysis from their charting expert (Bill Adlard, who also has his own report called Hemscott Chart Insight). When the market was performing reasonably well, they were usually in sync. On the odd occasion when they weren't the fundamentalist would still recommend it, but mostly be proved wrong later. As the market started to deteriorate, the fundamentalist would pick a stock as a buy, and Bill would recommend it as a short. The fundamentalist was obviously getting grumpy about it so out came an email saying they wouldn't be putting Bill's comments in in future as it was too confusing for the readers. At one stage Bill had become so bearish the others obviously thought he was in cuckoo land. However as events transpired, Bill has been proven to be nearly 100% correct, with a number of the fundamentalist recommendations made against Bill's advice becoming complete disasters ( I lost 90% on one of them). From my own perspective his analysis has saved me a lot of money, and would have saved me more had I followed his advice more diligently. This was obviously also the experience of many others, with Bill's commentaries now being reinstated in the Analyst reports. If anyone wants to check these out, you can sign up for a free two week trial to both the Analyst and the Chart Insight services (log on to the Hemscott site above and follow the instructions). This enables you to read the archive of previous articles. There is an interesting one on charts vs fundamentals dated 17 July 2002, and several others on DJIA, FTSE, UK Banking sector. Hans ----- Original Message ----- From: "Phaedrus" <Phaedrus@techemail.com> To: <Sharechat@sharechat.co.nz> Sent: Friday, October 11, 2002 11:06 AM Subject: [sharechat] All Ords Index > Hans, > With regard to the All Ords Index, you asked "what do I see coming up next". > I have no idea. I can tell you that this index is at an interesting point, in that if it continues to fall, a double top formation will have been confirmed. Confirmed double top formations after uptrends mark trend reversals 75% of the time. The other 25% become consolidations of the prevailing trend. > Should the index rise, it could be entering a trading range, as marked on the chart below. You don't really think I can see into the future do you? Given the strong US rally yesterday, I'll bet the All Ords Index is up today, though! > > Holden, > Re .gif format - I didn't realise that the ScreenHunter program wouldn't run on Linux. I guess you can't give Microsoft the finger and expect to get away with it without some disadvantages. Can you not instal the GIMP? (Not that I know what one is!) > Data supplies for MetaStock or any other charting program are very cheap. There are several vendors, with prices of around $17 - $24/month for NZ data, for example. It only takes a minute or two each day to download the new data and merge it with your database. You don't have to do it every day if you don't want to - the files simply accumulate. You can even get free data if you want, for example Sanfords provide free Australian data for their clients. With excellent free charting facilities now available on the net, buying your own software and data is no longer a necessity. > > Phaedrus. > > _____________________________________________________________ > Are you a Techie? Get Your Free Tech Email Address Now! Visit http://www.TechEmail.com > > _____________________________________________________________ > Select your own custom email address for FREE! Get you@yourchoice.com w/No Ads, 6MB, POP & more! http://www.everyone.net/selectmail?campaign=tag > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- > 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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