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Re: Asking too much ??



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Only on a piece by piece basis. A study cam out a year or so ago that
pointed out for example, that when a company comes out with an unexpected
increase in earning, that the stock still performs substantially better than
the rest of the market even after the news is out. Combine his with other
info and the message you get is buy stocks in an uptrend and I say on
pullbacks.

Jim
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jim Wixson" <jwixson@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "'Jim Bronke'" <jvbronke@xxxxxxxx>
Cc: <omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2001 5:52 AM
Subject: RE: Asking too much ??


> Jim,
> Certainly true - and worth noting.
> You are talking about investment strategy - what to invest in; one of the
> most important considerations for an investor.
> Although I have not defined my question precisely, I am talking about the
> tactics of getting into and out of a position, once a market has been
> chosen.  I am trying to look at the technical aspects of technical trading
> and to find out and put some performance numbers on what is being done by
> us - serious attempters of TS.
> Will I find out anything?  Yes, slowly - a picture is beginning to emerge.
> Perhaps there is some place where this is discussed, measured?
> Jim W.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jim Bronke [mailto:jvbronke@xxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Thursday, 13 December, 2001 08:09
> To: jwixson@xxxxxxxxx; quantcap@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Cc: omega-list@xxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: Asking too much ??
> The way to find the best system has more to do with what you invest in and
> not just your system. Reading the books on what the best Mutual Fund
> managers do generally results in people who invest in stocks that are
moving
> to new highs.You just don't buy them at the new highs, generally. Wait for
a
> pullback. Anyone looking for a miracle system for the Index futures are
pipe
> dreaming. Go with companies' that are doing good and you will increase
your
> percentages and reduce your drawdown.
> Jim Bronke
>
>