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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 18 Oct 2003 01:08:06 +1300 |
Hi Woody > >Perhaps I don't understend the Clock analogy very well... > OK I'll make my point again in a different way. The pure trader claims they don't need to study F/A because all the characteristics of any company have been well studied by analysts, all the good and bad outlooks have been well documented, and what appears on your computer screen is a summary of everything: the market price. By this logic, the pure T/A person will only focus on price and the direction of movement of that price. Everything else disappears from the T/As vision: except the price, and the price history! A potential problem I see in this method is that a 'price' is only a label. Would you be happy to go into a supermarket and buy your groceries by selecting a tag from a large noticeboard consisting of 'price labels only' mounted on hooks? Once you have selected your 'price goods labels' you would then hand them to the check out and some happy store person would go out the back and collect the goods for you and deliver them in a brown paper bags to your house. If you are thinking that what I have described sounds something like internet shopping as practised by Woolworths (for example) you are correct, except there are two small differences. 1/ There are no pictures or descriptions of the goods when you order them in my 'buy by noticeboard' scenario. 2/ There is a 'no return' policy in my scenario. Once you order a good and it is delivered in its paper bag you must keep it. So, I ask you, would you be happy to do your grocery shopping under my system? If you knew exactly what you were getting, possibly yes. But do you always know exactly what you will be getting? For example, say you want to order a supply of cakes of soap, enough for a year of use. Now suppose the manufacturer made the cakes of soap 25% smaller without announcing that fact, but kept the price the same. You order 12 cakes of soap at the price you know, but find that instead of lasting until the end of the year, you run out of soap at the end of September. You run out of soap because you failed to closely inspect the goods when it came to you and failed to notice that although the price you paid was what you expected to pay, and the number of soap cakes you expected to get arrived, you did not notice that the size of the cakes of soap had become smaller. By an analagous argument, you might buy a share at $1.25 because that price has proven to be a 'lower bound resistance point' in the past. But by using this strategy you assume that you know what you are buying. If the underlying fundamentals of the share have changed you may *not* know what you have bought and your assumed support and resistance lines might have changed. You will then suffer the equivalent share indignity of running out of soap. > >but here is a little challange for you. Send me a >Chart any chart preferably a weekly over several years and I will >prove that it has Support and Resistance areas weeks, months and even >years Old. > >I dare you!!!! > OK, I might just do that. I will send it to you off-line. SNOOPY -- Message sent by Snoopy on Pegasus Mail version 4.02 ---------------------------------- "You can tell me I'm wrong twice, but that still only makes me wrong once." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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