| Technical Analysis The technical discussion forum for traders. |
| View Poll Results: Do you pay attention to fundamentals? | |||
| Yes | | 7 | 19.44% |
| No | | 22 | 61.11% |
| Only for longer term trading | | 7 | 19.44% |
| Voters: 36. You may not vote on this poll | |||
![]() | | Tweet | |
| | #73 | ||
![]() | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Quote:
When you label all this as Fundamental Analysis which institutions spent billions on, you have just created massive confusion. God save the newbie traders on TL .
| ||
| |
|
| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to OAC For This Useful Post: | ||
DbPhoenix (01-02-2009) | ||
| | #74 | ||||
![]() | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Now to the meat... Quote:
Quote:
![]() Quote:
Quote:
I am still trying to figure out what you are getting at here. Someone who can consistently make money (say 2 million a year) with a candle stick pattern that gives them a couple of ticks a day (again, consistently)...is not a skilled trader to you? My response to you would be a simple "so?". I guess it depends on what your personal idea of success is. I'll take my 2 million a year and enjoy every second of my life without understanding what's going on and not being anyone in this game. I could be completely off (apologize if I am) but your mentality kind of sounds like those that try to buy the bottoms and sell the tops. Those that are looking to catch the entire move. You don't have to be the president to be in politics. ![]() I will leave it with this...as those before me have stated, it's not that one can't trade with fundamentals or use them in their strategies, but that it is indeed not needed to be consistently profitable in this business. Just like I am sure some would argue that technicals are not needed to be consistently profitable as well. P.S. It would be great if those that do trade fundamentals start some threads on the topic. | ||||
| |
|
| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Hlm For This Useful Post: | ||
atto (01-02-2009), firewalker (01-02-2009) | ||
| | #75 | ||
![]() | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Quote:
As for time for posting live trades, in danger of sounding like a snob, but i'm gonna say it anyway, i stand by that no professional trader (maybe a couple) are posting on the forums during market hours if they're trading, and by professional i'm classing people who have made a career in the financial markets by rising through various paths in the city. I stand by my statement that sitting at home trading for yourself and trading in the city are completely different worlds (i'm not for one moment knocking people trading on their own at home, more power to you), but you have to accept that it's like comparing sunday league football to the premier league. Active city traders and fund managers in the city work together, go to meetings together, play football together, get wasted together and go to each others weddings. During market hours if i've got a debate of an observation, am i gonna mess around on the internet, or sit and talk to the other 7 traders in my office that work for me? At the end of the day if people on these forums were that good 90% of them would go to a firm in the city and go 'hey look this is my trading record and pnl, i'm hot stuff' and you would get hired if you can prove you can do it, then you wouldn't be risking any of your own money, and you would have massive rapid potential to the upside in terms of earnings. When i started in the city with three other grads, it took us about a year to be a clip size that was earning us 1m a year. Plus once you're in the city you're learning for the best of the best, have the best tools on the planet at your finger tips, and have massive networking opportunities. Put all these factors together and you have two different class of traders that are worlds apart, and like i say i stand by my statement that 'professional' traders in the form that i described above are not gonna be posting on forums for the reasons above. If i caught one of my traders messing around on a forum during market hours i would fire him. Like i say, i repeat i'm not knocking anyone, or putting the forum down because i think it is a great place for people wishing to know more about trading to come together. However when i read posts like these they are full judgmental heuristics The heuristics are all over the place because 99.9% of traders trade their beliefs about the market, and once they've made up their minds about them beliefs, they're highly unlikely to change them. So when you go and trade whatever market, you think that you're considering all the available information (all i need is a bar chart, price actions tells me everything), but instead you've just eliminated most of the useful information thats available by your selective perception. For example when you're looking at a 5min candle stick chart thinking thats all you need, then that a heuristic called law of representation, meaning that you are assuming that something is assigned to represent something. So you look at you candle charts and think to yourself that it's the market trading, when in reality it's just a line on a chart, no more, no less. However you accept this as being meaningful because... you were told it was meaningful when you first started studying the markets, everybody else uses candle stick chart to represent the markets when you think about the market trading you typically visualize a daily bar A candle chart doesn't tell you anything about how much activity occurred, and it doesn't show you how much activity occurred at what price. There is a lot of information that is extremely useful to a trader that isn't shown in any form on a candle chart. For example did the transaction involve opening up new contracts or closing out old ones? What kind of people were doing the trading? Did a had full of floor traders trade with each other all day long, trying to outguess and outmaneuver each other? How much of the activity was in a single unit, how much activity was in large units. How much was traded by a single trader, how much was traded by large funds or institutions? Also a candle chart doesn't show who's in the market, like how many people are long and short in the market and what their position size is. All this information IS available. I can go on and go, like how chart gives you no psychological information such as how many people are sitting outside of the market with the belief it will go up or that it will go down, and are they likely to convert them beliefs into trades. However it doesn't really matter that much because you wouldn't be able to trade using any of it because of your judgmental heuristics and biases. The information will be eliminated by your selective perception There are so many biases that non professional traders (even some profession traders) have. For example the lotto bias... which is about the increased confidence people have when they, in some way manipulate data, as if manipulating that data is somehow meaningful and gives them control over the market. Because you think the candle chart is the best method for trading toy manipulate the chart in some way until you feel confident enough to trade it. People think they can make money by buying/selling at the right time and they simply want to know when to buy or sell. The average person here wants to know what to buy/sell right now to make a boat load of money. Most people would rather have someone tell them what to do.... Non professional traders who try and make it on their own become fascinated by entry signals that they perceive to be synonymous with a complete trading system, thats because you get a sense of control. Unfortunately the market is far more complex than that. Like i say, look at what happened to the dotcom day traders. I'd like to see how many people here will still be trading in 7-10yrs, but only a couple.... When i look around on the internet from time to time and see what systems people are trading etc, i'm shocked that a lot of people think that they're 'systems' For example for all the tech guys, who think thats all they need, how many of you have considered probability rate information in developing your TA trading system? Probably not, i've never met a non professional that has. The majority of people haven't even tested their system properly, they think they have, but they haven't, i would say the majority couldn't post accurate data on the expectancy of their system You need to overcome the biases that are affecting you or you will never be a good trader. Like i've said, making a couple of million off a candle chart doesn't make you a good trader. You need to consider biases such as representation bias - people assuming that when something is supposed to represent something, that it really is what it's supposed to represent reliability bias - people assuming that something is accurate when it may not be lotto bias - people wanting to control the market so they get all hung up on indicators and entry signals and all that rubbish Conservatism bias - once you believe you have found such a pattern and become convinced that it works, you will do anything you can to avoid evidence that it doesn't work (i think of you w in particular here....) randomness bias - people like to assume that the market is random and has many tops and bottoms that they can trade. The markets are not random at all. Distribution of prices who that markets over time have infinite variance, or what statisticians call long tails at the end of the bell curve. People fail to understand that the even random markets can have long streaks, and as a result, trying to trade tops and bottoms is the most difficult type of trading there is Then even once you accept these, then you need to integrate stuff such as degrees of freedom and postictive errors I'll say it again, look at what happened to all the dotcom day traders, making millions a year from their bedrooms. They boxed themselves in and failed to truly understand the fundamentals of what they were doing in every aspect. They had something that worked... yeah it worked then for a few years tops and gave them a false sense of security that they actually knew what they were doing. Where are they know? I read an article about a dotcom day trader working in mc donalds.... Market conditions are reflected by the people trading them, now days the day traders from their bedrooms are gone and the massive majority of the financial markets are professional city traders. There's few places at the top and if you really want to make it in this game you need to pull out all of the stops and fight to stay. Yeah you might have something thats working now for you, but it won't last, and how many of you will make enough money in a 2/3 years to never have to work again? Like i say, look at the dotcom traders.... Boost! | ||
| |
|
| The Following User Says Thank You to 86834 For This Useful Post: | ||
O-3 (01-02-2009) | ||
| | #76 | ||
![]() Join Date: May 2008 Location: Belgium Posts: 1,453 Thanks: 597
Thanked 326 Times in 169 Posts
Blog Entries: 60 | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Quote:
![]() Unless a trader is scalping, there is no reason to stay glued at the screen every second of the day. But I'm afraid we are deviating from the topic, whether traders are retail, institutional, professional is irrelevant. What matters is that the information you need to trade profitable is in the chart. PS: Note again how today economic news was bad (manufacturing index at 28-year low), but the market somehow mysteriously found a way to digest that and is currently trading well above the previous day's closing price. Quote:
| ||
| |
|
| | #77 | ||
![]() | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Quote:
| ||
| |
|
| | #78 | ||
![]() ![]() Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: USA Posts: 1,797 Thanks: 329
Thanked 3,475 Times in 830 Posts
Blog Entries: 31 | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Quote:
Beginners should also note that "technicals", at their core, have very little to do with 868's characterization of them. See the Price Action thread. | ||
| |
|
| The Following User Says Thank You to DbPhoenix For This Useful Post: | ||
Hlm (01-02-2009) | ||
| | #79 | ||
![]() | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Quote:
Thats why you will only go so far sitting at home trading on your own. If you want to learn about stuff like this then try and get yourself into a trading enviroment where you can learn from the best. Either that or accept reality mate. | ||
| |
|
| | #80 | |||||
![]() | Re: All You Need... is a Chart Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
![]() As for as the other information scattered throughout your post about bias and such...good stuff. Those are big ticket items that can destroy a trader that is starting out. However non of that removes from the fact that one can be consistently profitable and make a very healthy living trading purely off of technicals/price. | |||||
| |
|
| The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Hlm For This Useful Post: | ||
![]() |
| Tags |
| chart, news, tape reading, technical analysis, wyckoff |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| ∧ Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| YM Chart 7/27/07 | TinGull | The Candlestick Corner | 2 | 07-30-2007 08:54 AM |
| a VSA chart a Day | flatwallet | Beginners Forum | 27 | 05-05-2007 01:41 PM |
| Chart-ex.com | torero | Trading Products and Services | 1 | 04-01-2007 09:35 PM |
| Chart Set-up | wsam29 | Market Analysis | 10 | 03-05-2007 05:13 PM |
| MP Chart | TinGull | Market Profile | 2 | 12-09-2006 01:03 AM |