Sean K
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kennas said:Just thought I'd start a thread just on analysing the XAO. Anyone who has a diffent version of where they think the All Ords might be heading please feel free to post an alternate, or different perspective.
This might be an opportnity for any other T/As to put their particular analysis on where the XAO is going. Fib? Gann? EW? Would like to see any of that overlayed on my simple charting.
By my reckoning looks to be getting heady again. In the upper ranges of the general tend, hovering on upper BB and over 80 on stochastics. Might be due for a pause. Support established at 5100, which might be around where it'll pull back to and where the 200d ma will probably hit the line if it does fall back to that level. MACD turning which could also indicate the start of some more consolidation, before heading north again.
wavepicker said:have charts, but unable to upload due to size limits imposed by this site
swingstar said:tech, did he say a wave 5 from 4700 will end at 5400?
swingstar said:tech, did he say a wave 5 from 4700 will end at 5400?
This true, but you can have various wavecounts and they can all pointing to the same thing. When that happens you know you are on a winner.In my research on EW I found a couple of interesting quotes:
"if you put 10 Elliott Wave analysts in a room, you'll get 12 opinions".
I presume you are referring to Bob Prechter. He picked the bull run of the 80's in 1978 when everyone was bearish he then picked the top when everyone was bullish and told his subscribers to exit the mkt in 87, 1.5 weeks before the crash. he called the peaks in the Nikkei 225 in 1990 and the peak of the Nasdaq."Elliott Wave called 10 of the last 3 crashes."
wavepicker said:Elliott Wavers like other TA practioners make heaps of mistakes, they also make stunning forecasts. Unfortunately that is the nature of the business we are in and when dealing with probabilities of future price movement.
Cheers
wavepicker said:I presume you are referring to Bob Prechter. He picked the bull run of the 80's in 1978 when everyone was bearish he then picked the top when everyone was bullish and told his subscribers to exit the mkt in 87, 1.5 weeks before the crash. he called the peaks in the Nikkei 225 in 1990 and the peak of the Nasdaq.
Well if you make enough predictions about everything, you'll eventually get a few spectacularly right.nizar said:Thats a VERY impressive record
nizar said:Thats a VERY impressive record. He and his followers mustve made a bucketload during those times.
wavepicker said:Every Guru has his day I suppose. All it takes is 1 or 2 bad calls and their reputation dies very fast. He did win the 1984 trading championship with a 444% gain in 4 months which was a record back then. (There have been much bigger gains in comps since then)
Where he came apart was with his long term forecasts. Forecasting in the short term is hard enough, but making a very long term forecast is something else!!
Cheers
It's Snake Pliskin said:Hi,
.......In fact nobody can be accurate with long term forecasts, and I mean LONG-TERM.
Enjoy your day
Wilma,Wilma said:LONG-TERM is a relative term and could mean different time-frames. LONG-TERM for a true day trader who doesn't hold open positions overnight might say a week is LONG-TERM. An investor might say LONG-TERM is months or years.
Either way, it is possible for someone to be accurate with LONG-TERM forecasts. Their credibility should be based on the percentage of times their forecasts eventuate.
Quote: Dictionary.com
day trader
n.
A speculator who buys and sells securities on the basis of small short-term price movements.
long-term
–adjective 1. covering a relatively long period of time: a long-term lease.
2. maturing over or after a relatively long period of time: a long-term loan; a long-term bond.
3. (of a capital gain or loss) derived from the sale or exchange of an asset held for more than a specified time, as six months or one year.
kennas said:Some fundamental factors that lead me to think we are going to push through to all time highs in the near term include:
Interest rate rise is factored in.
Leading into the Christmas Cheer period.
Commodities are holding, with some rising considerably.
Oil looks to be going to hold around $60.00.
POG looks to have made a higher low, perhaps set to turn and break through $600.
Companys have reported faily well over the past few weeks. No surprises.
M&A speculation and activity will keep some stocks fully priced for a while.
US inflation seems to be contained, although there are mixed signals.
Regional geopolitics settled a little with Thailand and Nth Korea stable, for the moment.
There are a much higher than average number of people logged into ASF on a daily basis.
The pe ratio for the XAO is below long term trend. (Read this a few days ago, haven't got the figure)
The Bull is back!
So, I think that could pull back to 5200 in the short term and probably find a bit of support there, or worst case 5100 where it should bounce, and then push through 5400 by the end of the year. If good news keeps coming out of the US, then perhaps it'll just keep pushing on up....
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