champ2003 said:If you want to make money in the market i recommend forget the fundamantals and look at the trend. The trend is your friend.
I always find it interesting watching people as they look heavilly into the fundamentals of a company only to find that they miss the boat. On the other hand fundamentalists commonly make the mistake of calculating a companies worth only to find that the market doesn't agree with it therefore the trend never takes them to that expected market price anyway.
The trend is your friend is the key to remember if you want to make any money out of the market. It's important to learn how to understand the trends though.
Cheers!
champ2003 said:Oh ok. Great!
Analysts downgrade MacBank
From: AAP
February 02, 2006
MACQUARIE Bank suffered downgrades from brokers today who raised questions about its earnings forecasts and the investment bank's plans to roll out new specialist funds.
Shares in Macquarie Bank (mbl.ASX:Quote,News) dived yesterday after it made only a minor upgrade to its guidance and revealed that a number of major floats will miss out on inclusion in this financial year, ending March 31.
Macquarie now expects an annual net profit "slightly up" on the record $823 million in 2004-05.
Goldman Sachs JBWere analyst James Freeman pulled back his forecast for annual net profit by 10 per cent to $875 million, with further downgrades to the following two financial years.
Mr Freeman questioned whether Macquarie (mbl.ASX:Quote,News) would be able to achieve its plans to spin off about $1.8 billion worth of assets currently on its balance sheet into new specialist funds over the coming months.
These include a long-awaited Korean infrastructure fund and the float of explosives company Dyno Nobel in Australia, both of which were previously anticipated to have occured by the end of March but will now likely take longer.
He pointed to challenges such as rising bond yields and the underperformance of Macquarie's funds such as Macquarie Airports and Macquarie Infrastructure Group, which has wiped off all their performance fees in the second half.
"We believe these issues could see Macquarie struggle to get its target of $1.8 billion of assets off balance sheet over the six to seven months; or alternatively it could see Macquarie sacrifice the price at which these assets are sold," Mr Freeman said.
He also said there was a risk Macquarie could continue to miss out on performance fees, which would reduce net profit by about $50 million or five per cent in 2006-07.
UBS analysts also downgraded their earnings forecasts for Macquarie, partly due to weaker trading conditions and partly due to the delays in the new specialist funds.
"This may have the effect of pushing other transactions further out the pipeline, potentially leading to a slowdown in the specialist funds model rollout," the analysts wrote.
But they said underlying investor demand remained reasonably strong.
"We see the recent (share) price weakness as a good buying opportunity," they said.
Rafa said:(i thought i was on the HDR thread.. what is going on!!!)
Rafa said:actually there is a higher level of maths in technical analysis than in fundamental analysis...
fundamental analysis (and accounting) is just addition, subtraction, multiplication and division, the stuff you learn in primary school...
technical analysis is actually using pure maths (waves, fractals, pattern recognition techniques) the stuff you need to be bloody smart to work out...
(i thought i was on the HDR thread.. what is going on!!!)
Ah.. it looks like it got moved... well done moderator.. it was going off topic!
willow said:Jack Schwager has interviewed both types and has come to the conclusion it is a personal choice on what is effective and comfortable for the individual. I myself prefer a technical approach. Cheers.
TheAnalyst said:Read this....its the fundamentalist analysts that actually set the trends...lol
wayneL said:Well done Willow
This encaspulates the argument in a single sentence.
Both types of analysis work well, depending on the trader, time frame, etc.
Milk Man said:Where is Mr Radge in this debate? He sums up the matter pretty well.
Anyway, IMO its sentiment that drives the market. The reasons people buy and sell stocks are limitless; good earnings prospects, good charts, what Warren Buffet had for brekky, was the moon tipped up last night (if you follow gann). From my perspective the best way to make a profit is to devise a system that works when backtested, and works when traded real time.
champ2003 said:If you want to make money in the market i recommend forget the fundamentals and look at the trend. The trend is your friend.
I always find it interesting watching people as they look heavilly into the fundamentals of a company only to find that they miss the boat. On the other hand fundamentalists commonly make the mistake of calculating a companies worth only to find that the market doesn't agree with it therefore the trend never takes them to that expected market price anyway.
The trend is your friend is the key to remember if you want to make any money out of the market. It's important to learn how to understand the trends though.
Cheers!
Knobby22 said:Both methods work but the rewards for both depend on how much effort and thought you put in.
A lazy investor who says he is using fundamentals is often just guessing as he hasn't really understood why he is buying. Likewise a trader who trades technically but doesn't put in effort is just gambling.
"Would u buy something with a P/E of 100+ but the trend was "a good up" one? eg Google just before the recent falls?"
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