September 29, 2008

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Filed under: Finance Information @ 2:14 pm

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September 26, 2008

The Logic Behind Technical Analysis

Filed under: Finance Information @ 1:23 pm

Copyright 2006 Geoff Gannon

Let me first say that I do not now engage in technical analysis; nor, have I ever engaged in technical analysis. I do not believe doing so would be a productive use of my time.

Having said that, I do not claim technical analysis has no predictive value. In fact, I suspect it does have some predictive value. The Efficient Market Hypothesis is flawed. It is based upon the (unwritten) premise that data determines market prices. As Graham so clearly put it in “Security Analysis”:

“…the influence of what we call analytical factors over the market price is both partial and indirect – partial, because it frequently competes with purely speculative factors which influence the price in the opposite direction; and indirect, because it acts through the intermediary of people’s sentiments and decisions. In other words, the market is not a weighing machine, on which the value of each issue is recorded by an exact and impersonal mechanism, in accordance with its specific qualities. Rather should we say that the market is a voting machine, whereon countless individuals register choices which are the product partly of reason and partly of emotion.”

I’ve seen a lot of people cite this quote, without bothering to notice what’s really being said. Graham had a very broad mind, much broader than say someone like Buffett. That’s both a blessing and a curse. At several points in Security Analysis (and to a lesser extent in his other works), Graham can not help but explore an interesting topic more deeply than is strictly necessary for his primary purpose. In this case, Graham could have said what many have since interpreted him as saying: in the short run, stock prices often get out of whack; in the long run, they are governed by the intrinsic value of the underlying business. Of course, Graham didn’t say that. Instead he chose to describe the stock market in a way that should have been of great interest to economists as well as investors.

Data affects prices indirectly. The market is a lot like a fun house mirror. The resulting reflection is caused in part by the original data, but that does not mean the reflection is an accurate representation of the original data. To take this metaphor a step further, the Efficient Market Hypothesis is based on the idea that the original image acts on the mirror to create the reflection. It does not recognize the unpleasant truth that one can interpret the same process in a very different way. One could say it is the mirror that acts on the original image to create the reflection. In fact, that is often how we interpret the process. We say an object is reflected in a mirror. We rarely use the active “an object reflects in a mirror”.

For some reason, when we talk about the market we like to use inappropriate metaphors. We talk about wealth being destroyed when prices fall. Yet, no one talks of wealth being destroyed when the price of some product falls. When the market rises, we talk about buyers, as if there wasn’t a seller on the other side of the trade. Above all else, we talk about “the market” not as a mere aggregation of trades, but as some sort of object all its own.

The Efficient Market Hypothesis does not recognize the true importance of interpretation. Saying that data (publicly available information) acts on market prices omits the key step. After all, the same data is available to every blackjack player. Casinos just don’t like the way a card counter interprets that data.

The Efficient Market Hypothesis is not the only argument against technical analysis. There is also empirical evidence that questions the utility of technical analysis. However, empirical evidence alone is not sufficient to prove technical analysis has no predictive power. If most knuckleball pitchers had limited success, the knuckleball might be an inherently ineffective pitch, or there might be a better way to throw it. The same is true of technical analysis.

The adjective “random” is a very strange word. Although it is rarely the definition given, the most appropriate definition for random would have to be “having no discernible pattern”. The word discernible can not be omitted. If it is, we will take too high a view of science and statistics. There’s a great introduction to economics written by Carl Menger which begins:

“All things are subject to the law of cause and effect. This great principle knows no exception, and we would search in vain in the realm of experience for an example to the contrary. Human progress has no tendency to cast it in doubt, but rather the effect of confirming it and of always further widening knowledge of the scope of its validity.”

All things are subject to the law of cause and effect; therefore, nothing is truly random. A caused event must have a pattern – though that pattern needn’t be discernible. Even if one argued there is such a thing as an uncaused event, who would argue that stock price movements are uncaused? We know that they are caused by buying and selling. Stock prices are the effects of purposeful human actions. Several sciences study the causes of purposeful human action; so, it would be hard to argue any human action is uncaused. Furthermore, each of our own internal mental experiences suggests that our purposeful actions have very definite causes. We also know that the actions of some market participants are based in part on price movements. Many investors will admit as much. They may be lying. But, there is plenty of evidence to suggest they aren’t.

If the actions of investors cause price movements, and past price movements are a partial cause of the actions of investors, then past price movements must partially cause future price movements.

Technical analysis is logically valid. Not only is it possible that some form of technical analysis might have predictive power; I would argue it necessarily follows from the above assumptions that some form of technical analysis must have predictive power.

So, why don’t I use technical analysis? I believe fundamental analysis is a far more powerful too. In fact, I believe fundamental analysis is so much more powerful that one ought not to spend any time on technical analysis that could instead be spent on fundamental analysis. I also believe there is more than enough fundamental analysis to keep an investor occupied; so, he shouldn’t devote any time to technical analysis. Personally, I feel I am much better suited to fundamental analysis than I am to technical analysis. Of course, there is no reason why this argument should hold any weight with you. I also believe there is sufficient empirical evidence to support the idea that fundamental analysis is a far more powerful tool than technical analysis.

Even though I believe there must be some form of technical analysis that does have predictive power, the mental model of investing which I have constructed does not allow for such a form of technical analysis. In other words: logically, there must be an effective form of technical analysis, but practically, I pretend there isn’t.

Why? Because I believe that’s the most useful model. One should adopt the most useful model not the most honest model. I’m willing to pretend technical analysis does not work, even though I know some form of it must work.

Really, this isn’t all that strange. In science, I’m willing to pretend there are random events, even though I know there must not be random events. In math, I’m willing to pretend zero is a number, even though I know it must not be a number. A model with random events is useful. In most circumstances, a refusal to allow for random events would be harmful rather than helpful. The model with random events is simpler and more workable. The situation is much the same with zero. It isn’t a number. To include zero as a number, you would have to put aside the principles of arithmetic. So, we don’t do that. In school, you were taught that zero is a number, but that there are certain things you must never do with zero. You accepted that, because it was a simple, workable model.

I propose you do much the same in the case of technical analysis. You should recognize the logical validity of technical analysis, but create a mental model of investing in which technical analysis has no utility whatsoever.

Online Forex -Currency Trading

Filed under: Finance Information @ 12:59 pm

Foreign exchange currency trading is also known as Forex trading, or FX, and has no single physical marketplace like the New York Stock Exchange does on Wall Street in New York or the Tokyo Stock Exchange does in Japan. The New York Stock Exchange and the Tokyo Stock Exchange online traders are limited to making purchases during the actual trading hours governed by New York Stock Exchange hours or the Japanese Stock Exchange’s Tokyo hours. In contrast online Forex trading gives traders access to the online Forex trading community through an electronic series of different online trading platforms. Online Forex trading and online accessibility are nicely compatible because the world’s foreign currency exchange market is a 24-hour market, and the internet makes online forex trading a 24 hour possibility open to anyone with a computer, a telephone line and money. Anyone, any corporation or any bank can log onto an online account at any time, and trade foreign currency through online forex trading.

Online forex trading is primarily the purchase of one currency from a particular country, using the currency of a different country. This exchange involves currency from two different countries at once. It can mean purchasing Japanese currency with Australian currency or purchasing German currency with Spanish currency. While that sounds simple, in fact, approximately $1.9 trillion is traded on Forex daily, making Forex online trading the biggest exchange worldwide. Although anyone can participate in Forex online trading, the key players are usually banks – commercial and investment – and exchange traded futures and registered futures commission merchants.

Kevin Anderson is the owner and opperator of http://www.forextradingcenter.info a site developed to give users the most updated information, articles, and news related to the Forex Market.

Planning For Contingencies

Filed under: Finance Information @ 11:44 am

No one likes to think about the worst-case scenario, or to make a detailed plan to recover should it happen. It’s just one strategy for learning how to trade in a relaxed but focused way so that, should you ever face a severe financial setback, you can recover from it. Trading requires intense concentration and focus, and it’s difficult to maintain this posture when the pressure is on you to perform. Therefore, you have to do whatever you can to minimize any expected or even unexpected psychological pressure.

The most obvious way to relieve such pressure is to think in terms of probabilities and carefully manage risk. By that I mean avoid overtrading, fast markets, exceptional tick sizebe careful just ahead of reports that might drastically affect price movement. Avoid illiquid markets, avoid adding new risk when it appears a trend or swing may be nearing its end.
It’s useful to remember that you may not win on any single trade, but after a series of trades, you will have enough winners to make a profit in the long run. It’s also important to manage your risk. Determine your risk up-front and risk only a small amount of trading capital on a single trade. Doing that will ease a lot of the pressure, allowing you to be more open to see the opportunities that the market offers. Don’t break under the pressure of a potentially fatal loss. Think about the possibility, and be ready to recover from it.

These days planning for contingencies must of necessity include short-term planning. Because the markets have changed so considerably in recent years from what they were many years ago, contingency planning has to include trading simple methods and scalping-type setups. We are in an era of thousands of traders jumping in and out of markets using extremely short time frames. Such trading has introduced an incredible amount of noise into the marketplace. No longer can the industry claim that speculators are there primarily for the purpose of providing liquidity to the market. I have to wonder why it is not plainly stated that trading from a 1-minute chart is simply gambling? In what manner can it be said that jumping into the market one minute and out of the market 3 minutes later is in any way providing liquidity for the hedger, whose sole purpose is the long-term protection of his position?

Short-term noise is a contingency that must be planned for. Erratic, jerky moves caused by scalping must be planned for. This includes having your own plan for making scalping trades if those suit your personality and comfort level.

Plan for sudden drastic moves in the market caused by stop-running. Increasingly, and especially in the stock market, I am seeing more and more of the sudden and unexpected price melt-down, or equally sudden and unexpected price explosion. You have to learn how to protect yourself from such moves, and you might even learn how to profit from such moves.

Joe Ross has been trading for more than 47 years, and is a well known Master Trader. He has survived all the up and downs of the markets because of his adaptable trading style, using a low-risk approach that produces consistent profits.

Joe is the creator of the Ross hook, and has set new standards for low-risk trading with his concept of “The Law of Charts.” Joe was a private trader for most of his life. In the mid 80’s he shift his focus and decided to share his knowledge. After his recovery, he founded Trading Educators in 1988 to teach aspiring traders how to make profits using his trading approach. He has written 12 major books on trading. All of them have become classics and have been translated into many different languages.

Joe holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from the University of California at Los Angeles. He did his Masters work in Computer Sciences at the George Washington University extension in Norfolk, VA. Joe still tutors, teaches, writes, and trades regularly. Joe is still an active and integral part of Trading Educators.

Joe Ross - EzineArticles Expert Author