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    Scooty - I'd also suggest you read Taleb's Black Swan or Fooled by Randomness books. You may see what you're doing in a different light if you do.
    I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter man

    Comment


      Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
      Never consider the chart as a 100% certain of an outcome. When charting you're drawing what is probable rather than what is possible.

      If folks don't like TA, that's totally cool. Just ignore it.
      Everything is 'probable', it's the confidence in the probability that is important. Your confidence in your graphs is towards the high end .... the rest of us on here are less sure
      I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter man

      Comment


        Originally posted by Whorty View Post
        Scooty - I'd also suggest you read Taleb's Black Swan or Fooled by Randomness books. You may see what you're doing in a different light if you do.
        Do you really believe that would make a difference?

        Comment


          Originally posted by Old Greg View Post
          Do you really believe that would make a difference?
          No, but it would keep him quiet for a few hours
          I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter man

          Comment


            Originally posted by Whorty View Post
            take your latest chart, there are so many places you could have chosen but you went for 2001 and 2009 points to extrapolate to where your bias thinks the FTSE will land (soon!). You have chosen the dot.com bubble and the financial crisis as indicators of where the market might go during the pandemic (even though you say the pandemic isn't the reason the markets have dropped).

            See why your applying your own bias?

            Yo have ignore the trend in the market since 2009; that is, since new controls were forced on to banks to ensure that they have sufficient capital adequacy. Or the common sense (mostly) with investors since the dot.com where (most) investors now only buy into companies with some form of income.

            By all means stick with your graphs, but just be mindful that whatever lines you draw, it is you drawing them, you choosing the points to connect, and hence your bias. Be very very careful when the graphs are constantly supporting your own view

            What you've written above is the opposite of charting. Never once do I try to attach a news story or some world event to give reason why price action has done a certain thing. That's a slippery slop.


            I've extended that line of confluence between 01 and 2009 on the 3-month chart below. Low and behold it has major confluence in 1993 - coincidence or something more?

            This is not my bias - this is a line that is telling you buyers and sellers are very concerned on this area. I'm only being scientific. Those are facts, not my bias. Like any scientist, I study, observe the results, ask new questions - rinse and repeat.

            Even more interesting, this line also interacts with the golden ratio at every reset - really interesting. Did not know that before today.


            "Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark Twain

            Comment


              Originally posted by Whorty View Post
              Everything is 'probable', it's the confidence in the probability that is important. Your confidence in your graphs is towards the high end .... the rest of us on here are less sure

              That's deep

              In math speak we say...

              "Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark Twain

              Comment


                Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
                What you've written above is the opposite of charting. Never once do I try to attach a news story or some world event to give reason why price action has done a certain thing. That's a slippery slop.
                No, but you do attach news stories or world events to why a price action is likely to happen. That’s a lot worse.

                Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
                If you're not into TA, there's always another way to measure the sentiment. Bad news. The responses on here are evident of that. Conversely look at the 'good news' stories for the tech companies right now, contrarian alarm bells



                From Reuters in February 8th, 2009

                Lloyds investors fear dark hole for Black Horse - price action was up 200% 12 months later.


                This is Money, November 2011

                Lloyds Banking Group in turmoil as Nathan Bostock backs out - price action was up 270% 24 months later.


                Today:

                Thousands of Britons living in EU told their UK bank accounts will be closed

                Comment


                  The clue is in the post

                  'If you're not into TA, there's always another way to measure the sentiment. Bad news. The responses on here are evident of that. Conversely look at the 'good news' stories for the tech companies right now, contrarian alarm bells'


                  Find a publication on TV where I've used a 'news' story. You'll not succeed.
                  "Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark Twain

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
                    What you've written above is the opposite of charting. Never once do I try to attach a news story or some world event to give reason why price action has done a certain thing. That's a slippery slop.


                    I've extended that line of confluence between 01 and 2009 on the 3-month chart below. Low and behold it has major confluence in 1993 - coincidence or something more?

                    This is not my bias - this is a line that is telling you buyers and sellers are very concerned on this area. I'm only being scientific. Those are facts, not my bias. Like any scientist, I study, observe the results, ask new questions - rinse and repeat.

                    Even more interesting, this line also interacts with the golden ratio at every reset - really interesting. Did not know that before today.


                    In this graph you have chosen to use two points only ... you could have just as easily used points from earlier in the graph, resulting in a steeper upwards direction of line thus predicting a different position. Your bias allowed you to only use the 2001 and 2009 points to show what you wanted to see.

                    I get you don't think you're adding bias, I mean, why would you? It's quite possible it's unconscious bias and you don't even realise you're doing it.

                    If the FTSE never reaches 4500, or at least not in the next 12 months, so you're then 36 months predicting something that hasn't happened, where will this leave you? Will you open a new narrative with a new 'low' for FTSE, or will you look at your technique and admit you're wrong? How many months do you have to go before you accept that you're wrong?
                    I am what I drink, and I'm a bitter man

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
                      The clue is in the post

                      'If you're not into TA, there's always another way to measure the sentiment. Bad news. The responses on here are evident of that. Conversely look at the 'good news' stories for the tech companies right now, contrarian alarm bells'


                      Find a publication on TV where I've used a 'news' story. You'll not succeed.
                      The clue is in my post. Did I mention TA?

                      You’ve linked news stories on bad events and shown how the price rose following the event, and then somehow linked it to tech stocks which have lots of positive news being due a fall, and sprouted this as being a contrarian approach.

                      Contrarian investing is a con anyway. What they actually do is look at shares which are out of favour, but are sound businesses, likely to recover. That’s called “fundamentals”.

                      Comment

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