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From: | Travis Morien <travismorien@yahoo.com> |
Date: | Fri, 28 Feb 2003 13:36:29 -0800 (PST) |
--- Morgy <morgy40@xtra.co.nz> wrote: > Snoopy & Travis > > I spoke to Dr Alex Elder about your (& Travis's) > request for information on > traders using TA, Alex has been a professional > trader for over 20 years but > he suggests you read "market wizards by Jack Swagger > who gives plenty of > examples of succesful traders (I have not read it) , 1) I've read these books. One clear message I got from it is that those profiled were overwhelmingly interested in risk mangement and spent virtually all of their effort on that. 2) I'm not after proof that it is possible to trade successfully. I'm after proof that support and resistance exists and is exploitable, which is how this thread began and furthermore that trends can be readily identified ahead of time and that TA has predictive ability. If I recall correctly while there were some TA users in these books there were just as many FA users though as I said risk management was where the real game was. 3) Ever tracked the performance of the Wizards years later? Several of them crashed and burned, though no books were written about that little development. > I also know of Darryl > Guppy and Colin Nicholson in Australia, Darral is a > straight out techncian > and Colin uses FA to sort targets and TA to get in > and out and advocates > this method strongly. On his web site he talks of 2 > professional traders he > knows and vouches for personally , one being > american (Dan Gramza ) and the > other a Englishman (I think his name is Tony > Plimmer) both of whom ran > funds under management using TA. > John J Murphy has been a professional trader, > analyst (Technical) &TA fund > manager for many years. Rattling off the names of people that recommend the techniques is not the same as providing credible statistical evidence that TA works. Not trading, TA. Different topics. I could dig up the name of several leading astrologers but that wouldn't prove that astrology works, only that people use it. > > John Bollinger, must have heard of him Travis, > surely Yes, heard of him. I'd love to see credible evidence that the strategies (Bollinger Bands) work though. I know that they certainly don't seem to in my copies of Metastock and Omnitrader, which allow indicators like this to be backtested. > > I am also a member of the IFTA (international > federation of Technical > Analysts) email list and many who write on the list > give there email address > at investment banks & financial fund managers across > the world, surely they > are not all in La La land. I've got a client who used to trade on behalf of a bank's derivatives division, he thinks TA is bunk. I'm not interested in hearing how popular TA is, I know that it is popular. I want credible evidence that it isn't a complete waste of time. > I have however read several Buffett books, lovely > theory, obviously not many > people follow his theories because people still buy > stocks that he wouldnt > touch with a barge pole including the mysterious > fund managers that Travis > is fond of quoting. How many people actually do you > know as professional > investors follow his theory to the fullest (within > practicalities) ?. Very few. Buffett himself has said that 95% of people in markets are short term speculators and he claims this is why he is so successful. With such a large number of people who can't see the woods for the trees he can pick up deeply undervalued franchise stocks all the time. > > While I accept the names you do give Travis, to > throw up some unnamed fund > manager who loathes TA is really not credible, > particularly as your industry > has been severley exposed over recent years giving > people extremely dubious > advice. In fact it has been so bad they have had a > heck of a job convincing > government not to regulate. They looked good in a > bull market. What the f@%& has this got to do with the topic at hand? I'm after credible evidence that TA works and you throw in some random swipe at the funds management industry. Your use of the word "particularly" implies that somehow the sales driven culture of commission based advisers (of which I am not one) and the short term oriented nature of the managed funds industry (which I despise) reinforce your point somehow. This is a cheap and completely irrelevant shot and certainly doesn't build up any case at all for TA. > In my opinion, local financial investment managers > seemed to learn nothing > from the 87 crash, they just jumped on the US market > when it started to roar > and said come on the party is over here, how many > said to a client, heh the > market is over valued stay on the sidelines, not a > one I bet, reason, > simple, no fee money from that is there. Once again, how the heck does this point lend credibility to TA? Crashes happen because people don't give a hoot about value investment and prefer to follow trends and chase high momentum stocks. if anything you can blame the TA types for the crash of 87. Buffett, among other value investors, had almost completely liquidated his portfolio long before the crash. Buffett made his money in 1987 only by arbitrage and it was with all the cash he was sitting on just before the crash that he bought his now famous positions in Coke and Amex. > While I have no axe to grind with you over your anti > TA stance, personal > choice is your right, given the profession (would > you call it a profession > ?) you are in I think most poeple will take it with > a grain of salt. You've not provided a shred of evidence that TA works. You dropped the names of a few traders then you took a meaningless and gratuitous swipe at the financial industry. Try again Morgy. Travis www.travismorien.com __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Tax Center - forms, calculators, tips, more http://taxes.yahoo.com/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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