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  #1  
Old 11-12-2007, 10:33 PM
bills217 bills217 is offline
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Default Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

I mean, I get that they are philosophically very different (if not opposed), but I really do not understand the immediate dismissal of all things TA by a lot of value investors I have come into contact with recently.

Friday I met with a group of analysts at a value investing firm, and when I told one of them about my interest in TA, he chuckled and said to not even mention it to the other analysts.

That is just one anecdote, but it seems like I have been getting this a lot lately - and I am hardly an opponent of value investing.

Why are those types so ready to dismiss TA as worthless? How could so many people use it so successfully if it is really all smoke and mirrors? And why do valuation and TA have to be mutually exclusive when it comes to making buy/sell decisions? What's wrong with using a combination of the two?

Any insight would be appreciated.
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  #2  
Old 11-12-2007, 10:53 PM
stinkypete stinkypete is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

[ QUOTE ]
Why are those types so ready to dismiss TA as worthless?

[/ QUOTE ]

because they are poor value investors and have a strong need to validate themselves.
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  #3  
Old 11-12-2007, 11:08 PM
ImBetterAtGolf ImBetterAtGolf is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

I'm going to assume that "TA" means technical analysis.

The first problem is that while there are many value investors with documented good track records, there are hardly any technical (not quantitative, but technical) investors with documented good track records. Most of the stuff you see on bookshelves is written by people who claim to have good track records, but usually have a conspicuous lack of documentation. The field is nonintuitive and arcane and there are few people who everyone can agree have been successful.

Another reason is that many people who practice this "art" are certifiably unsophisticated. That makes it easy for most professionals to look down on TA practitioners.

At best, I'm agnostic about the subject.
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  #4  
Old 11-13-2007, 12:17 AM
kimchi kimchi is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

Also, I think many fundy types assume TA exclusively involves involves looking at charts and deciphering the patterns and predicting where prices are going to next. I buy and sell based on pretty basic TA but very little of my time is spent staring at the chart. It works and has worked satisfactorily for me so far and has been proven to be robust during testing.

I think much of the value investor's resistance to TA is often ignorance on TA methodology and people like to shun things they don't fully understand or have an interest in. I'm sure most/all TAs accept that FA works well in the right hands, but perhaps many FAs think that a successful TA is just running hot.

I think being a stubborn value investor and ignoring price and volume can really sting. There is a lot to be said in combining the two disciplines. A value investor can find companies whose valuations provide a set-up (can be short, too) and a TA can find an entry point whereby they can avoid buying over-sold companies still in the grip of a long-term bear move, or avoid shorting overbought companies still in a bull market frenzy. - shorting "overvalued" tech stocks during thelate 90s would have left a nasty scar, just as not buying the same overvalued companies could have resulted in a missed opportunity.

There have obviously been famous value investors (and I'm sure Desert Cat will chime in soon) and some perhaps less famous TA traders. I prefer what interests me. I find TA fascinating, but FA to be a frustrating trip into tedium.

There are a million and one ways to extract money from the market, but the trader's or investor's psychological methodology is more more important than their trading/investing methodology (IMO). Besides, I think FA is more suitable for investing whereas TA is more of a trader's tool. Apples and oranges.
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  #5  
Old 11-13-2007, 02:17 AM
stinkypete stinkypete is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

[ QUOTE ]
I find TA fascinating, but FA to be a frustrating trip into tedium.

[/ QUOTE ]

dingdingding!
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  #6  
Old 11-13-2007, 02:36 AM
adios adios is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

[ QUOTE ]
I mean, I get that they are philosophically very different (if not opposed), but I really do not understand the immediate dismissal of all things TA by a lot of value investors I have come into contact with recently.

Friday I met with a group of analysts at a value investing firm, and when I told one of them about my interest in TA, he chuckled and said to not even mention it to the other analysts.

That is just one anecdote, but it seems like I have been getting this a lot lately - and I am hardly an opponent of value investing.

Why are those types so ready to dismiss TA as worthless? How could so many people use it so successfully if it is really all smoke and mirrors? And why do valuation and TA have to be mutually exclusive when it comes to making buy/sell decisions? What's wrong with using a combination of the two?

Any insight would be appreciated.

[/ QUOTE ]

Most people I encounter actually use both, they try to figure out good entry and sell points from "technical" indicators while selecting investment vehicles using FA.

Valuing equity using FA is a mathematically sound endeavor, just have to be accurate about the parameters that are used (not necessarily easy). Not so sure about TA though but TA covers such a wide range of things I suppose it would be good to talk about what people do in using TA.
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  #7  
Old 11-13-2007, 09:50 AM
mo42nyy mo42nyy is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

I buy and sell based on pretty basic TA but very little of my time is spent staring at the chart. It works and has worked satisfactorily for me so far and has been proven to be robust during testing.


So what is your definition of TA?
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  #8  
Old 11-13-2007, 10:04 AM
CrushinFelt CrushinFelt is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

lol TA
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  #9  
Old 11-13-2007, 10:44 AM
stephenNUTS stephenNUTS is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

I always favored T/A as trader,but def. used fundamentals alongside as well.
Esp. on news info like EPS release,management changes,takeover speculation/arbitrage opps,an FDA drug being approved or rejected,...or even SEC related issues.

I always felt using both was a positive

SF [img]/images/graemlins/cool.gif[/img]
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  #10  
Old 11-13-2007, 01:07 PM
Mark1808 Mark1808 is offline
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Default Re: Why are value investor types so rigidly opposed to TA?

[ QUOTE ]
I mean, I get that they are philosophically very different (if not opposed), but I really do not understand the immediate dismissal of all things TA by a lot of value investors I have come into contact with recently.

Friday I met with a group of analysts at a value investing firm, and when I told one of them about my interest in TA, he chuckled and said to not even mention it to the other analysts.

That is just one anecdote, but it seems like I have been getting this a lot lately - and I am hardly an opponent of value investing.

Why are those types so ready to dismiss TA as worthless? How could so many people use it so successfully if it is really all smoke and mirrors? And why do valuation and TA have to be mutually exclusive when it comes to making buy/sell decisions? What's wrong with using a combination of the two?

Any insight would be appreciated.

[/ QUOTE ]

There is no imperical eveidence to show that TA can give an investor an edge in the market. With computers it would be very easy to back test any theory you want, why is there no proof that TA works?

Value investing meanwhile has a strong argument for its success:

http://www1.gsb.columbia.edu/valuein...ves/DOC032.PDF
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