Would anyone care to quantify the relationship between the 'bull' and 'bear' graphs in Exhibit A on the previous page?
Today's trades: A: No trade. Hold cash position. B: Sell ENPIX(long) position. C: Add $5000 to PMPIX(long) position.
What do you mean by quantifying the relationship between the graphs? If you are looking for a mathematical formula between the two then let's say you treat both graphs as functions, then if the bull graph is F(x) then the bear graph is G(x)=F^(-1)(10-x), i.e. the inverse function of F(10-x).
That works. Or, one could merely describe the relationship by saying that the bear graph is the bull rotated 90 degrees CW, with the color changed from green to red. It's a very open question. I should have probably used the word 'describe' which is less limiting than 'quantify'. Whatever... Anyone else?
I would call the Bull graph a 0,+1 and the Bear graph a 0,-1. Anyone else have a description for the graphs?