Aug

24

In all these years I could never understand how this [counting] approach can coexist with affirming the reality of the ever-changing cycles. Like how do you know when to trust this counting and when the cycles changed on you?

H. Humbert responds:

My understanding has been that counting is also usually rather simple and apparently (but not) naive statistics. That there's great power in simply comparing counts on a fundamental level. And yes, everything cycles, but cycles have their predictability as well so our data gathering needs to understand this. Am I wrong on this?

Peter Ringel writes:

to have a workflow for out-of-sync systems is a/the king's discipline of trading to me. Monitoring the equity curve in a naive or clever manner is probably always involved. Ever changing cycles / relations is often a function of reflexivity, IMHO. Required minimal sample size is also important here. Because of the drift, one can get away with quite a lot in equities. But laziness it is.

H. Humbert responds:

cycles have their predictability

Seems questionable as it relates to counting.

Peter Ringel replies:

cycles, as in phases/regimes, not as in 7-week cycles. Though the senator showed us many "classic" cycles too.

Larry Williams comments:

Once you count and have the numbers you may find patterns or cycles, etc.

Humbert H. asks:

But we're talking about the "ever-changing" part. How do you know when past information is no longer as predictive as it once was?

Larry Williams responds:

Great question. in my working theory of cycles all data is important for long term. for shorter term 5-10 years… but I am still a student of this stuff.


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