Do you see patterns in Random Walks?

Discussion in 'Technical Analysis' started by atlTrader666, Aug 10, 2011.

  1. Nine_Ender

    Nine_Ender

    Markets are not random, anyone with any sense in this business knows this. There was a coin flipping thread where a bunch of "academic types" ( some of which ironically lacked any common sense ) posted all sorts of crap for months on end. I produced a stock ( Bioval, now Valient ) that was trending higher on fundamentals. The idiots insisted it could be a random chart, despite massive evidance it was not.

    Stock continued trended up for a year, gaining 300% profit for anyone riding it. Coin flippers would still be telling all of us they were flipping mostly heads for a year, and the whole thing was random and not due to increasing earnings.

    The whole premise of random markets is stupid. It ignores what equities represent, ownership in companies that have growing or declining value.
     
    #101     Aug 15, 2011
  2. Nine_Ender

    Nine_Ender

    What utter bs !!! Wow.

    Efficient markets actually make prices LESS random then before. If you don't understand this basic fact, its hopeless. If a company makes an additional $1,000,000 over estimate on their quarterly earnings, they are worth $1,000,000 more. An efficient market will add the appropriate amount to the share price to reflect this extra money.
     
    #102     Aug 15, 2011
  3. Samsara

    Samsara

    Look, you're basically just restating the theory. What you're not following is that it's not the <i>tenets</i> of the theory itself that I take issue with, it's the <i>first principles</i> of inquiry upon which it's based. They require XYZ conditions of all market participants (rational expectations, access to information, speed of execution). Yes, the EMH allows irrational <i>behavior</i> to co-exist with rational participants, but that's not the point. Also, I've never seen any account that assumes big money = rational, small money = irrational -- where did you get that from?

    Much like how half of all models of market behavior that economists employ implicitly assume a log-normal distribution and then model like crazy off of that, this theory begins by bracketing out reality for a transcendental hypothesis and then proceeds from a top-down basis.

    This is why I used the term reification and interjected "all" into your garden variety restatement of the idea. It's an irresponsible hypothesis that was assumed to be a fundamental truth by those who confuse economics with physics (and the lazy), and then went viral.
     
    #103     Aug 15, 2011
  4. wrbtrader

    wrbtrader

    I just return to this thread which is actually a repeat of prior discussions at ET involving similar topics over the past many years and like the other threads it really comes down to the above quote that I strongly agree with.

    There are inefficiencies in the market and they can be consistently exploited. Yet, I like to add that traders (not many) do notice the inefficiencies but really don't know how to exploit them, don't have the resources to exploit them or don't have the discipline to exploit them.

    Mark
     
    #104     Aug 15, 2011
  5. MAESTRO

    MAESTRO

    It is so refreshing to know that majority of people out there are still clueless! I thought that within past 3 - 4 years some of you here could have learned a bit about the subject since so much of the new research results became readily available. I was even worried about possible competition! But, no, still the same dark, uneducated, low-level crowd! Thank you so much for your ignorance. I can still be comfortable in doing my research knowing that majority of you still thinks that the Earth is flat (well, yeah, otherwise all the rivers would just slip away!) Excellent! Animal-like desire for identifying the patterns (whether they exist or not) is the only straw that you grab on to; it's the only comfort that you can provide to yourself without understanding the real picture. Causality is a drug! Accepting the fact that majority of things happen without any cause would be not suitable for our egocentric minds! That is why you always need to know "what happened?" in order to justify your post factious decision making. And you are instantly satisfied if someone explained to you that "the markets sold off on the European worries!" Planet of the Apes indeed!

    Cheers,
    MAESTRO
     
    #105     Aug 15, 2011
    beginner66 likes this.
  6. You go ahead and give us one example of one thing that has no cause and that is verifiable empirically. Then we may believe you. Otherwise, we are free to clasiffy you as another troll.

    Go ahead, make my day...
     
    #106     Aug 15, 2011
  7. rew

    rew

    You are the one lacking in comprehension. Of course if a company makes $1,000,000 over estimate its price will spike up. But who predicted that result? The company could have made $1,000,000 less than the estimate (with about the same probability) and then the price would have spiked down.

    So, prior to the earnings announcement the stock is priced rationally at the best estimate for the earnings. After earnings are announced the price moves to the value appropriate for the actual earnings. There was no way to predicate the earnings so the size and direction of the move is random.

    You simply don't understand "random" as the term is used by finance academics.
     
    #107     Aug 15, 2011
  8. Samsara

    Samsara

    He's not a troll, but a wealthy and successful quant.

    But given the claims of insight into the "real picture", likely also a positivist and an adherent of the correspondence theory of truth.

    In other words, well advanced only his domain of knowledge but equally in the dark when it comes to epistemology.
     
    #108     Aug 15, 2011
  9. rew

    rew

    Well, some small players are rational but the guys who manage multi-billion dollar pensions and the like *have* to be rational. They have the resources to thoroughly investigate any business they invest in, including private meetings with the management and extensive studies of the market. So yes, the big money does on average act more rationally than small investors, many of whom act on stock tips taken off the internet.

    Economists use log normal distributions because they're lazy and like easy, tractable math. There are other distributions for random prices that are more realistic but they are harder to work with. So, yes, a lot of theoretical stuff out there should come with a warning tag, "TOY MODEL USED HERE. DON'T USE IT WITH REAL MONEY."
     
    #109     Aug 15, 2011
  10. MAESTRO

    MAESTRO

    Gravity, Time, DNA, Atoms, your mood swings, dreams, beliefs, desires and millions of other things that have no cause, no reason and no explanation. We have learned to live with all of those things without demanding the answer to the question "WHY?" Have it ever occur to you that any logic attempted to explain more or less complex phenomenon is domed to fail? The life in the uncertainty is not an easy task; it is much more easier to hide cowardly behind the curtain of pretend knowledge and be ready to satisfy yourself providing the reason where the reason simply does not exist.
     
    #110     Aug 15, 2011
    beginner66 likes this.