scose-no-doubt
Veteren member
- Messages
- 4,630
- Likes
- 954
Oh wait I thought it was a trade. It's already been hit. Meh.
Bedsit, nice trade
What you do works for you, but it seems to me that the example shows that the fibs aren't really that key to what you do. You draw a fib up to 1.3656, which if taken (you didn't) at 23.6, 38.2, or 50% all look like losers. The 61.8 is not too healthy either, and the 76.4 would have had a bit of drawdown before coming good. You didn't take any of those fib retracements (perhaps waiting for it to break one way or to go with the trend?).
You took a break out of a range (price action), waited for a close, and then took the entry short. None of that needs fibs. The only fib thing you used was as a target, which probably resulted in you having a good R:R. If fibs give you better R:R on your trades, and belief that it will go far then they could be helping you. Add good R:R to good signals that indicate direction and it is no surprise to me that could be successful. As for it being a target and getting hit...was it the trend, the breakout and the big round number 13500 that price was likely to hit and drawn to or the 161 fib extension?
Perhaps the answer is both
Lets get this straight...you just said that 30 ish and 60 ish are rules of thumb that you use but that 31.2 and 61.8 are complete nonsense....?
Do you really think that there is that much of a difference between the two sets of values ?
Actually you would probably be very surprised at how often retracements tag fib levels, mainly the 38.2 and 50 numbers, to a very precise level
Which is why the concept of Fibonacci, with it's oh so precise 38.2% and 61.2% is nonsense.
Nope - there is not much difference.
Which is why the concept of Fibonacci, with it's oh so precise 38.2% and 61.2% is nonsense.
Unless we have people that look for a 38.2% retracement * nothing else.
Like I say - draw lines between sing highs & lows, put an area of wiggle around them and fairly soon you have covered a large percentage of the chart.
Nothing wrong with that at all. The thought that 38.2% or any of the other numbers is somehow magical because it 'exists in nature' is nonsense.
PS - it is fairly simple.
People end up covering 30-40% of the space between 2 swing points with these fib 'zones'.
If you cover 30-40% of the space between 2 swing points with zones, then it is statistically quite likely that price will reverse in one of those zones.
This is what people are doing, even on the pictures on this thread.
There is nothing magical in the numbers 23.6, 38.2, 61.8 & 76.4, if there were - then people would be actually using those precise numbers and not extended zones around them.
The thing is - we are looking for confirmation in something here. People don't want to hear "how much of the space are you covering with that zone", "what's the probability that the zone will be significant', "how does it compare with randomly assigned zones". All people want to talk about is "Well I use it, so it works".
Therein lies the problem - this thread is titled "Proving that fibonacci retracements have an edge" and thus far no-one that uses fibs will even discuss probabilities of their zones being hit based on total coverage.
Nobody ever said that there was anything magical about fibs....so you are disputing something that was never said in the first place....
I think that that answers the original question about whether they have an edge.
They do not have an edge, do they?
They are a method of approximation, at best.
I'll change what I said earlier to
By all means use them if that is the only horizontal line you can think of. After all, you are going with the crowd--they must be right!
The sciences do not try to explain, they hardly even try to interpret, they mainly make models. By a model is meant a mathematical construct which, with the addition of certain verbal interpretations describes observed phenomena. The justification of such a mathematical construct is solely and precisely that it is expected to work.
Food for thought. John Von Neumann
That is a very limited view of science. Most, maybe 90% ,of scientists are realists about their theories. Otherwise, they would not be looking for particles and stuff like that. Mathematicians tried to get the upper hand during a time period in the past but science is much more than math models. It is about explaining the phenomena. Math is a tool only.
Without looking at the detail of how he uses them, Bedsit seems to use them OK ...
I suspect those in the UK may be more kind to him as he played a major role in saving the country.