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Trendbreaker
Trendbreakers - Shocks to the System ...
Share prices react to the 'unexpectedness' of
news events, but since we cannot define the
unexpectedness of a news event until afterwards,
it is not a useful concept (i.e., the definition
becomes circular); we have to deal with news
events themselves rather than some ill-defined
quality of them.
Unexpected news events which act as external
'shocks' to the share price, we have termed
'trendbreakers', which is very good name as it
tells us their principal effect. The use of
trendbreaker calibration objects which are
created in the news scatter chart, is our attempt
to define these extreme news events in terms of
their position on the M-F plane (note that it is
not always possible to do this); once so
identified, we will have an understanding of what
it is that we really have to watch out for when
we make a trade on this stock; most news events
are not really that important, all they do is to
contribute a small random noise component to the
share price dynamics, which can be easily
incorporated into our analyses.
Once created, a trendbreaker calibration can give
us an insight into the share price dynamics.
Ideally we want the share price to be insensitive
to news events, that way all news becomes an
easily incorporated, small, noise source; the
real world interpretation of this would be that
the market 'knows' a lot about the stock, perhaps
because its management take steps to release
information in a timely manner — which is
what they should be doing anyway. Also, we can
say that almost all the 'information' about the
stock is in its share price, which makes it
amenable for study using our advanced analyzers.
Of course, such stocks with 'nice' behaviour in
regard to news events might have very boring
share price dynamics; the market will have them
'fairly priced' anyway. The other extreme is the
kind of company with a lot of sharp changes in
its value due to e.g., failure to meet forecasts,
abrupt changes of management or involvement in
legal actions. If you want to trade on such a
company you need to do some further deep digging
into its workings. Such companies can provide
interesting trading opportunities however; you
could after doing some investigating believe
there will be a big move in some direction, but
not know which direction — BUT there are
options trading strategies which can be used to
profit from this information.
The last category of company would be the kind
which simply doesn't release much information to
the market at all, and also has a very 'jumpy'
share price — you get lots of these
companies on the FTSE AIM; small, often involved
in technology or mining. You should only trade
such stocks if you like to gamble, i.e., risk
excites you, or if, by hook or by crook, you have
managed to find out something no one, or at least
not many people know. But note that there are any
number of dodgy characters out there operating
out of boiler rooms which will have 'specially
selected' you to hear about the latest 'amazing
stock' which is about to 'go ballistic' —
this is likely to be a pump-and-dump scam; it is
as old as the hills. Newsgroups are another
disseminator of noise. If you really know
something, keep it to yourself, and cash in.
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Basic Analysis
Event Stream
MFI
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News Annotators
News Event
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Trendbreaker
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