New Frontiers in FOREX Market Analysis
Market Models - Old & New
Most traders are familiar with the two basic schools of market analysis that we call Fundamental Analysis and Technical Analysis. In the 1970's, members of the academic community proposed a new model of the market known as the "Efficient Market Hypothesis". This is more commonly known as the "Random Walk Theory" and basically said that the first two schools of thought were both wasting their time. In response to the Random Walk Model, other academics put forth an even newer theory of how markets work called "Behavioral Finance". These are all examples of comprehensive explanations of what factors drive market prices.
Here's a brief summary of market models, some of which are only in their infancy:
Fundamental:
Market prices are driven by tangible events and conditions in the real world, such as earnings, sales, management, natural disasters, weather, economic conditions, geopolitical tensions and so forth.
Technical:
Market prices are driven by what prices have done in the past. As traders observe these past and present price movements, their expectations about future prices lead to feelings of greed and fear which in turn create buying and selling pressures.
Random Walk:
Current market prices are efficient reflections of all known fundamental and technical information, so we can discern nothing about future price movements. The factors that cause future price movement will be so varied that such movements can only be random in nature.
Behavioral Finance:
Prices are driven by human psychology which is not always rational. Traders may base expectations about price movements, risk and reward on erroneous reasoning, thus causing prices to behave in non-random ways. Bubbles and crashes are classic examples of this.
Chaos Theory:
Market prices are part of a non-linear dynamic system in which outputs are re-introduced back into the system as inputs, causing complex behavioral loops and very sensitive dependence on slight variations in conditions.
Fractal Geometry:
Price patterns are recursively nested, meaning that a large pattern may be composed of several smaller similar or even identical patterns and so on through all time scales. Elliot Wave Theory is a classic example of this idea.
Scott's Emergent Property Model:
I've discussed this one in more detail in other articles, but the idea is basically that identifiable properties of price behavior emerge from the combination of unique individual trading styles of the current market participants. An analogy would be how a person's personality emerges from the combination of individual neurons in their brain. This price behavior changes gradually over time in an evolutionary way in the same way that the behavior of an organism changes over time due to both internal changes in its makeup and external pressures from its environment.My apologies if I have neglected or grossly mis-represented any of the various ways of explaining what makes the market tick.
Mechanical Trading Systems
Another subject that often grabs my interest is the design of mechanical trading systems based on money management rules. Some examples of such systems are "buy and hold", "dollar cost averaging", Robert Lichello's "Automatic Investment Management" (AIM) and any other systems that try to take the emotion out of trading through the application of a rule-based system for buying and selling. Systems like this differ from other mechanical systems in that the rules are based entirely on money management variables such as cash on hand, average cost per unit, total portfolio value and current position value.These kinds of mechanical systems were generally designed for the securities markets however, not for the futures or FOREX markets where the cash management situation is much different. In FOREX, unlike the securities markets, we are not taking some currency out of an account that we own and exchanging that currency for some security (i.e. dollars for stocks). FOREX involves simply putting down a margin deposit and then using that as the basis for borrowing some larger amount of a currency and exchanging it for another currency, making us long one currency and short another at all times. This entirely different structure of the FOREX market presents a new challenge to the design, use and understanding of the classic money-management based mechanical systems.
Artificial Intelligence & Artificial Life
What if we could design a neural net which could learn over time how to make consistent profitable buy and sell decisions based on FOREX chart data? Or if you prefer cellular automata (CA) we could create one of those in a multi-dimensional format in which symbols "swirl around", colliding and combining in new ways creating emergent behaviors. If we rewarded profitable behaviors and punished unprofitable behaviors would this CA eventually learn to behave like a super FOREX trader? What's that you say? Why not harness the power of evolution by using Genetic Programming? Ok, let's create an environment full of trading programs that have to compete with each other to survive and reproduce offspring programs. After many generations of "nature - red in tooth and claw" we may end up with a group of very robust FOREX trading programs. They will have earned their place in this virtual world where the prime law is "survival of the fittest."These are all examples of how the ideas popularly known as AI and A-Life might be applied to FOREX trading. Using programming languages such as LISP, I think it would be interesting to use neural nets, cellular automata, genetic programming environments and other techniques to create rudimentary trading programs. These programs would be exposed to many sets of market data (probably intraday charts) and over time would "learn" or "evolve" into expert trading systems. This isn't science fiction, but it's at the frontiers of cognitive science.
Computer Modeling of Dynamic Systems
What if the markets are deterministic in some ways? In other words, I'm wondering if there is a kind of "physics" behind price movements that is ultimately subject to complex cause and effect relationships. After all, we know that cause and effect relationships certainly exist. I decide to buy some FOREX currency pair, which causes me to place an order, which causes several offers to be hit in order to fill my order, which causes the bid and ask of the FOREX pair to rise, which causes some stop orders to be triggered, which causes more buying, which causes another price rise, which causes several news services to take notice, which causes several other people to buy, which causes the price to become so high that people start to take profits, which causes me to sell. Whew!Keeping track of all these relationships where each event may be caused by and in turn causes several other events is a job for computer modeling. In fact, computer modeling or simulation is what we use to try to understand the behavior of any complex system that we can describe through a few simple rules.We can use this technique to try to understand the dynamics of what goes on in the FOREX markets as described above. We can also use it to describe what's going on in the economy. We don't necessarily have to use cause and effect relationships either. We can model such things as the supply and demand levels of money, goods and labor in the economy as well as the price levels of these items. In a market, we could try to discover what factors lead to the buildup of buying or selling "pressures" and what factors might act as a catalyst in releasing those pressures, causing catastrophic crashes or sudden bubbles in the market.I do a lot of modeling on paper by simply drawing diagrams of how I think certain systems might work. This is different from computer modeling in that I am not trying to simulate the behavior of the system. Instead, I am often trying to reduce the complexities of a system down to some very simple concepts in order to understand what the main driving forces are.Here's an example of this. One of my favorite ways to reduce the complexities of any economy is to look at it as a simple set of elements and behaviors. People apply labor to natural resources which produces goods which the can then consume or save raising their productivity which allows them to continue the process.
Believe it or not, it actually took a lot of diagramming before I figured out that an economy really can be boiled down to:
1. People who want to live well
2. Natural resources which allow them to do so.
Every other economic concept like labor, money, wages and prices, etc. are just extensions of this basic model.Another way that I like to try to model the market is in terms of the different types of participants and their behaviors. For example I will divide the market up into "contrarians" who sell when the price goes up and buy when it goes down and "trend followers" who buy when the price rises and sell when it falls. How will different mixes of trend followers and contrarians affect the behavior of the overall market? Conversely, is there a way just by observing market behavior that we can tell if the market is dominated by trend followers or contrarians?Of course none of these models may actually describe reality accurately. We have to remember that models are really tools to help us suggest various hypotheses about the way things work. We can then test those hypotheses scientifically.
Inventing New Indicators
One of the most interesting coincidences (to me anyway) between the market and the physical sciences is the use of the variables "P", "V" and "T". In chemistry and thermodynamics these usually stand for the Pressure, Volume and Temperature of a gas, and they are related to each other in a way described by Boyle's law. On a price chart they stand for Price, Volume and Time. Are they all related? What if we had an indicator that kept track of how much time it takes on average for the price to move by a certain amount. Is it taking longer to move up than to move down? Is there more volume associated with down moves than up moves? What about an indicator for that? Or an indicator that combines all three variables?I was reading another trader's blog a few weeks ago and they mentioned that they would like to set up a moving median indicator of the price instead of the standard moving average which uses the arithmetic mean of the prices. The discussion went on to speculate about how a regular moving average and a moving median plotted together would interact. Would a crossover of the median by the mean be significant? I thought it was a pretty interesting idea.Coming up with new indicators is a common pastime for many traders, and I just wanted to give you an example of the thought process that I might go through when inventing a new one. Of course there are more indicators out there than any one person could ever use, but who knows...maybe the next one will give us new insight into the movement of prices that we've never had before. So let's keep inventing!Conclusion
Well that's it for our flights of fancy and romps through the imagination. Or is it only the beginning....?
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Thursday, November 27, 2008
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