Technical Analysis Naysayers Technical Analysis Naysayers: Vital Voo-Doo by Carl Waynberg The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Thursday, August 25, 2005 Carl Waynberg examines the arguments of the Technical Analysis Naysayers and proponents, and explains why he falls somewhere in the middle. ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Self-proclaimed skeptic, Carl Waynberg, examines the voodoo known as technical analysis. This supremely successful small-cap investor reveals what sort of voodoo works...and what doesn't. --- Advertisement ---
Six Times Better Than Owning Stock in Google.com...Guaranteed! When Google went public, even the luckiest public investors made no more than 253%, as the stock soared from a pre-set price of $85 to today's price of about $300. Meanwhile, other investors got the same shares months in advance... for as low as $35, $9, and even 50 cents a share! How? They were insiders. But now you can invest like an insider too, snapping up some of America's best companies at insider prices. This works so well... I guarantee you'll make at LEAST 253% doing this, not once but six times this year. Find out more... |
------------------------- VITAL VOO-DOO By Carl Waynberg In response to a question about moving averages from a reader last week, I thought it would make sense - and, perhaps, cents - to present a brief discussion of technical analysis. But, first, does it make sense - and cents? My GRIP (Growth in revenue, Relative momentum, Insider buying, Price to sales) subscribers know me as a cynical, skeptical investor whose mantra is "I question, therefore I am." So before we commit ourselves to an examination of technical trading, let's first determine whether it is, in fact, worth our while - emphasis on "worth." [I cover the subject extensively in my wildly popular report, "The GRIP's Take on T&A: Technical Analysis and Other Weirdness Applied to Over-the-Counter Securities." It comes gratis with your subscription to the GRIP.] Proponents of technical analysis believe that by analyzing a stock's chart, they can pick up patterns that can predict future price movement. "Poppycock!" - or something like it - counter the naysayers. Benjamin Graham, the "Father" of value investing and author of, "The Intelligent Investor," numbers among the naysayers: "The one principal that applies to nearly all these so- called 'technical approaches,'" writes Graham, "is that one should buy because a stock or the market has gone up and one should sell because it has declined. This is the exact opposite of sound business sense everywhere else, and it is most unlikely that it can lead to lasting success in Wall Street. Technical Analysis Naysayers: Witch Doctors Bill Gross concurs: "Technical analysts are the witch doctors of our business. By deciphering stock price movement patterns and volume changes, these Merlins believe they can forecast the future," asserts the nation's preeminent bond fund manager and author of "Everything You've Heard About Investing is Wrong!" Dr. Burton Malkiel, Chemical Bank Chairman's Professor of Economics at Princeton University, and author of "A Random Walk Down Wall Street," also pooh-poohs technical analysis: "The central proposition of charting is absolutely false," writes Dr. Malkiel, "and investors who follow its precepts will accomplish nothing but increasing substantially the brokerage charges they pay. There has been a remarkable uniformity in the conclusions of studies done on all forms of technical analysis. Not one has consistently outperformed the placebo of a buy-and-hold strategy." These are some pretty damning assertions from some pretty smart people. But other smart people eagerly take the other side of the technical analysis debate. Enter William Brock, Josef Lakonishok, and Blake LeBaron (BLL), whose 1992 study, "Simple Technical Trading Rules and the Stochastic Properties of Stock Returns," contradicted the notion – and a slew of previous studies – that technical analysis was futile. The trio kept it simple – relatively so, anyway: They analyzed moving averages and trading-range breaks on the Dow Jones Industrial Average from 1897-1985. Signals to buy or to sell were generated whenever long (50-day, 150- day, and 200-day) moving averages intersected with short (1-, 2-, and 5-day) moving averages. In addition, the authors of the study tested a widely held belief among technical analysts that investors should buy "breakouts" (the moment when a stock trades through a relatively high price that it has struggled to penetrate in the past) and sell "breakdowns" (the moment when a stock falls below a relatively low price at which it has tended to stabilize in the past). Buy methodically buying breakouts and selling breakdowns, the study's authors discovered that buy signals produced an average annualized return of 12% over the ensuing 10 days. Sell signals produced an annualized 7% decline over the ensuing 10 days. Net-net, the authors concluded that the results were "consistent with technical rules having predictive power." Technical analysts hailed the results as vindication, but it's important to note that returns were computed based on a 10-day holding period, hardly long-term, and even the authors cautioned that their "analysis focus[ed] on the simplest trading rules" and that "transaction costs should be carefully considered before such strategies can be implemented." Technical Analysis NaysayersL Studying the Study The study - one of the few academic papers to document a successful technical analysis trading strategy - was itself the subject of a study by Ryan Sullivan, Allan Timmerman, and Halbert White (STW) in 1999. "Data-Snooping, Technical Trading Rule Performance, and the Bootstrap" was the authors' attempt to determine the effect of data-snooping (culling data for correlations or patterns that would be unexpected to occur randomly) on the results of the 1992 study. They included the years 1985-1996, which not only provided for a full 100 years of data, but also provided an out-of- sample test for the years not included in BLL's study. STW also accounted for transaction costs, adding a 0.27% fee per trade for the best performing trading rule for the full period. The authors found that the robust results of the BLL study appear to be the result of data snooping. "The superior performance of the [BLL] trading rule is not repeated in the out-of-sample experiment covering the period 1987- 1996," Sullilvan, Timmerman and White conclude. "There is scant evidence that technical trading rules were of any economic value during the period 1987-1996." Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
But weep not for technical analysis. It boasts many fans. Technical analysis has its defenders, and their faith is not completely for naught. Over a narrow time span, stocks do tend to adhere to a trend. A number of academic studies have determined that winners keep winning over the short- run, even though they tend to underperform over longer time frames. James O'Shaughnessy sang the praises of relative strength in his book, "What Works on Wall Street." For the book, O'Shaughnessy reviewed 40 years of market data and found that stocks displaying high relative strength tended to outperform for the calendar year. Louis K. C. Chan, Narasimhan Jegadeesh, and Josef Lakonishok's paper "Momentum Strategies," (The Journal of Finance, December 1996) analyzes the subject thoroughly. Interestingly, the authors caution that any additional returns earned via momentum strategies may be nullified by additional trading costs. Technical analysis may be useful in the short-term but even then it should be used sparingly. A million people can be wrong. But a million people being wrong at the same time and in the same way can exert a substantial influence. Technical analysis, at a minimum, provides a real-time picture of the behavior of millions of investors. That's gotta be worth something, especially when "herds" of investors can sometimes trample all over a stock's fundamental attributes. So even if technical analysis is flawed, it still provides insights of "value." Investors who fail to acquire at least a working knowledge of technical analysis and charting tools, therefore, risk investing in ignorance of important market influences. A working knowledge of technical analysis becomes increasingly important as market capitalization decreases, which makes it particularly important for us small-cap investors. [Ed. Note: If you know small-cap investing, you know Carl Waynberg. If you don't, well, you really should. Check out Carl's full report on technical analysis for free and get in the profit game with the GRIP system here: THE GRIPPER --- Advertisement ---
Make $6,580 in 1 Trading Session! Imagine making 41.3% in 90 minutes…37.7% in two weeks…$3,848 in one day…92.5% in 48 hours…or $6,580 in a single trading session. Since 2003, this trading system has accurately predicted seven out of every 10 trades. But the best part is… The same kind of gains that used to take years to see can be yoursin days -- even hours. Find out what the next trade is. Click here:
|
|
------------------------- And the Markets... | Wednesday | Tuesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,435 | 10,520 | -124 | -3.2% | S&P | 1,210 | 1,218 | -10 | -0.2% | NASDAQ | 2,129 | 2,137 | -7 | -2.1% | 10-year Treasury | 417.00% | 417.00% | 412.79 | 412.78 | 30-year Treasury | 439.00% | 440.00% | 434.58 | 434.18 | Russell 2000 | 655 | 655 | 3 | 0.5% | Gold | $437.17 | $438.80 | $0.07 | -0.1% | Silver | $6.94 | $6.97 | -$0.07 | 1.8% | CRB | 320.02 | 317.56 | 4.84 | 12.7% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $67.32 | $65.71 | $1.97 | 54.9% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 110.20 | JPY 109.85 | 0.24 | -7.4% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2271 | $1.2233 | -108 | 9.5% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8008 | $1.8013 | -47 | 6.1% |
|