Technically Speaking, March 2008

From the Editor

Just like every other function within the MTA, the newsletter is poring over the results of the Member Survey and will be changing to meet the needs of the membership. Two trends that jump out in the initial review are the growing international membership and the increased number of younger members. We intend to respond with more articles about markets outside the US and increasing the variety of technical analysis topics we cover. As we do this, we will keep in mind the fact that our readers are professionals. You aren’t reading Technically Speaking for articles like “What is RSI?” We think you want actionable information that builds on the basics. Advanced topics, requiring detailed explanations, are covered in the Journal of Technical Analysis. That leaves intermediate-level topics for the newsletter, and we will strive to deliver them in the months ahead.

Often, as in this month’s issue, we will include charts, the tool that has been a staple of technical analysis for decades. Knowing that you are professionals, we print charts that provide a general idea of the topic. Cost prevents us from printing high resolution graphics and we realize that the vast majority of our readers can call up any chart on their computer terminals in seconds. As we work to bring you more TA, and more charts, we ask that you recognize our purpose is to provide research ideas, not specific trading tactics.

I look forward to the improvements we have planned in coming months and, as always, appreciate your feedback.

Cordially,
Mike Carr, CMT
MTA Newsletter Editor

What's Inside...

From the Executive Director

MTA Membership:

Education Chair Jeff Lay, CMT, Accreditation Chair Brad Herndon, CFA, CMT, and me have been working hard to...

Read More

Molly Schilling (MS): So are you a very visual person?

Gail Dudack (GD): Very visual. Yes, in fact, I have...

Read More

New York and Charlotte Chapters Have Joint Meeting!

From New York: On Monday 2/11/08, the New York Chapter conducted an open discussion on technical analysis using our members’...

Read More

The MTA Educational Foundation and Seton Hall University

Fred Meissner, CMT and I were recently invited to attend the Annual Jim and Judy O’Brien Financial Markets and Economic...

Read More

Down-Tick: The Newfound Weapon of the Bear “A Follow Up on the Elimination of the Up-Tick Rule”

After six months of data following the elimination of the shorting up-tick rule, it is clear from the TICK index...

Read More

MTA at the New York Trader’s Expo

Trader’s Expo New York City, New York February 17th -19th, 2008

The Market Technicians Association (MTA) maintained a display booth...

Read More

New MTA Members and CMTs

Several times throughout the year, the MTA would like to recognize those that have been granted Member Status and the...

Read More

MTA Annual Award Presentation

The MTA Annual Award presented at the winter retreat went to Bill Doane, a technician’s technician. Bill ran the Fidelity...

Read More

MTA Mid-Winter Retreat January 25-26th, 2008 St. Pete’s Beach, Florida

On January 25th and 26th, MTA Mid-winter Retreat participants met in St. Pete’s beach, Florida for 2 days of learning,...

Read More

A Call for Papers

We need quality papers to be considered for publication for the Summer and Winter issues.

Your MTA Journal strives to...

Read More

From the Executive Director

MTA Membership:

Education Chair Jeff Lay, CMT, Accreditation Chair Brad Herndon, CFA, CMT, and me have been working hard to improve the CMT, CMTi and related materials. We wanted to make you aware of the following:

  • With help of some volunteers, Paul Ciana and MacNeil Curry, CMT, we have updated the level 1 and 2 CMT Practice Exams and Quiz Cards. They are now available through the MTA Shopping Cart.
  • The MTA has hired James Bartelloni, CMT as a part-time Educational Coordinator. In this role, James will be developing and expanding our existing educational core on our electronic media, enhancing our CMTi course curriculum/CMT Prep Materials, acting as a liaison between the MTA and outside web vendors, and will help with trade show activities.
  • Important notice for CMT Level 3 test takers: Beginning with this spring’s administration of the exam, the MTA’s Board of Directors unanimously adopted a decision requiring CMT 3 candidates to achieve a pre-determined level of competency in Ethics in order to receive a passing score. This decision reflects the board’s commitment to the understanding and application of ethics, and the critical importance of ethical behavior to our organization, profession and clients.

Therefore, candidates will be required to achieve a minimum passing score of 70% on the Ethics section of the CMT 3 exam beginning in April 2008. This means that candidates MUST receive passing marks on the other sections of the CMT 3 exam AND attain a passing score of at least 70% on the ethics questions to pass the exam. Candidates that receive passing marks on the other sections of the CMT 3 exam but DO NOT attain a score of at least 70% on the ethics questions will not pass the exam and will be required to sit for the entire exam at a later administration of the test.

Please consider this decision as you prepare for the upcoming CMT 3 exam.

  • Consistent with our just completed Fall test administration, the scoring for the Spring 2008 Level 1 & 2 examinations will again not be immediately available.

As we have recently added content to our overall Body of Knowledge test databank, the scoring results are first sent electronically to the Prometric Company (our outside test consultants). The Prometric Company, along with MTA subject matter experts (SMEs) go through a detailed psychometric evaluation to ensure all answers are within acceptable test parameters (out of range answers are carefully analyzed for potential exclusion in overall scoring).

This process takes approximately 4-5 weeks to complete but we are confident that this review provides the most validity for our test candidates. The test results are then distributed immediately after the psychometric review process by MTA Headquarter staff.

Regards,
Tom Silveri
MTA Executive Director

Contributor(s)

Tom Silveri

Bio Coming

Gail Dudack, CMT

Molly Schilling (MS): So are you a very visual person?

Gail Dudack (GD): Very visual. Yes, in fact, I have a hard time remembering names unless someone’s wearing a name tag.

MS: Me too… and did your visual intelligence lead you into TA?

GD: That’s a good question. When I was in college I had a summer job at Pershing & Company. I was the research assistant which, at the time meant that I got to “sit in everyone’s seat” when they were on vacation. I did everything — I worked in the library, I answered phones, I was a junior analyst, I went to research meetings — a wide variety of things. When I went back to school and started my senior thesis in economics, I chose two topics, both of which, again at that time in particular, were connected to technical analysis. One topic was the odd-lotter and the other was short interest.

I had an interest in technical analysis before I actually knew what it was. When I came back to Pershing, I took Ralph Acampora’s class at night, followed by Alan Shaw’s class. So I started doing technical analysis myself at night. And after a year or so, when the technical analyst at Pershing left, I asked my boss if I could take his place.

MS: That was bold.

GD: It was very bold. It’s kind of interesting when I think back on who I was then — and for me, that was a bold move. My boss said that I needed to replace myself at the Information Center. As it turned out, I hired Mary Farrell. So my boss said I could update the technician’s charts at night. He had walls full of charts and lots of them were breadth indicators. I updated charts at night, and I began to write an internal report and after about six months I actually started to publish. It was an interesting way to start because I was always completely on my own.

MS: There was no “glass ceiling”…

GD: Right. There was no senior technician. I just asked for the job and worked my way into it and developed it myself.

After six months, I started publishing to Pershing’s clients and became a market analyst. I did that for quite a few years. I think the interesting thing about that was that I worked in such a vacuum. I didn’t get to read other technical analysts very often. And I was never formally trained by one within the company. So I really kind of developed my own style.

I think as I’m older now, I see a great benefi t in that and because I came to my own conclusions and developed my own thinking I think I have more conviction behind my own views maybe more than other people. And that’s because I do it from scratch. 

MS: Were you encouraged to forge ahead on your own thinking and analysis?

GD: My boss was head of research at Pershing. He did the economic writings, and I did the market technical writings. If anyone was my mentor, he was clearly my mentor, but he was not a technical analyst. I didn’t have anyone there influencing me. After a while, he actually told me he didn’t want me reading other technical pieces by other people; he didn’t want me influenced by someone else. I did create my own style and my own combination of indicators and so forth. It wasn’t until I was more established that I started to actually get other people’s work, and of course, you usually only get somebody else’s work when you’re a client, and I wasn’t a client to anybody. So it wasn’t that easy for me to actually get to see other people’s work. It just was what it was. To me, it wasn’t anything that I did on purpose; it just existed.

MS: Did you get involved with the MTA? 

GD: I took Ralph’s class and Ralph is a great connector of people. And then I took Allen’s class. I remember those very early meetings when the MTA was first starting as an organization. When we first got into a room, there were about ten of us and we all wondered “What’s this group going to be? Who are we going to be?”

So I was invited into the MTA early in its own life and that was a great networking group. I remember having some wonderful conversations at those early conferences with Bob Farrell and Bill Doane. Everyone was wonderfully supportive, great people. And I was the youngster at that time.

MS: How did it feel to be a woman in that crowd back then?

GD: Well, that was 35 years ago so it was a very different world. I was very often the only woman in the room, in 99% of all meetings, anywhere. I think what saved me, on one level, was that I always saw myself as something of a tomboy. When I was growing up, I was always involved in sports. I was always very involved with the football teams, and I even became a cheerleader at one point. And I loved to talk to my dad about war stories. In the Wall Street world, there’s an awful lot of sports and, believe it or not, kind of a “war-thing.” I always felt comfortable in those kind of conversations. I just felt like “one of the guys.”

And back then, it was more common to run into little flirtations here and there from the men, which of course is not allowed in the work world today. But back then it was very much a part of the work world, and I never took it seriously. It didn’t bother me. Today the whole culture has changed, of course for the better, and managers are trained continuously on behavior around women.

MS: You’ve been president of the MTA?

GD: I’m not sure but I might have been the first person to do a double term. That was in the mid-eighties. I’ve also served for many years on the Board.

MS: And, you received the Annual Award at the MTA 2007 conference?

GD: Yes. When I was called about the award, I thought they were calling me to serve on a committee because I’ve served on the awards committee several times. I received the award for my work on “Price analysis and market forecasting.” I was surprised when they told me I was going to receive the award because having served so many times on the committee, we’d always chosen someone who had written a book or done some theory, or some historical figure. So I feel very humbled to have received the award. I’m not sure what made them choose me for the award, but I know I’ve been a technician at heart for a lot of years.

MS: Let’s talk for a minute about your research?

GD: I do strategy, market strategy, for institutions. My clients are mutual fund managers, hedge funds, chief investment officers at big organizations. So my research is geared to that audience. I publish a weekly piece, I publish two different monthlies, and I put out what’s called, “Direct from Dudack” which is a quickie based on some immediate kind of information. I did one today on the employment numbers, and what I think today’s employment numbers mean in the larger scheme of things.

MS: So you address several time frames.

GD: I’m looking out the next three to six months, which is where I think you can really forecast. Of course everybody talks about the six to twelve month forecast, but I think that the further out in time you go, the more it becomes guesswork. What my clients look for from me is relatively near term market direction, the various risks to that call, and the sector leadership within the moves.

I try to capture the most important themes for a manager right now. I draw on economic data, on evaluation, and of course, technicals. Then I focus on which of those three, in my opinion, will play the most important role at any given time.

For example, we’re seeing that the world of trading has and is changing so much. We have an environment where hedge funds and day traders create a lot of what will be called “noise” to the longer term trend. But noise can be a pretty sizeable correction from time to time, and so we can get a series of what I call “liquidity crisis”, where there are really margin calls going on. We  seem to get some of these types of pull-backs about that every six months, and in times like that, I think it’s purely technical analysis that can help determine direction.

In defining the longer term trends, what’s going to drive the market generally higher or lower, I look at technicals, but I also look at valuation. The valuation is a great part of how low the market could go, or high it could go.

MS: Can you say anything about the current market?

GD: Well, here’s something that I actually talked about when I got my award, I think that one of the things that I try to do, and it probably comes from my economic background, is I try to look at the market from the big, big picture, starting off with some kind of economic framework, but also, what’s driving the market and who’s driving the market? And in that regard, every market has a different character, depending upon who the big buyer or seller is.

In the 70s and 80s, the big growth in money under investment was in pension funds and mutual funds. The mutual fund industry started off as a money market fund, and from there it grew to equity funds, and 401(K)s and pension funds. Those are the root drivers. When I say drivers, that’s where the greatest number of dollars were being placed, and those money managers drove the markets. And those players in the market were very fundamentally driven, PEs and dividend yields, etc…

In the 1990s, we saw that the big driver of the market actually turned out to be the household sector because the household sector discovered stocks, and they bought them, either through their broker, or through their 401(k). And if you take a look at what helped to drive the NASDAQ in 1997 through 1999, it was the fact that all the money fl owing in the mutual fund industry went into technology sector funds. That created a very different market, and it was not driven by anything fundamental. And to some extent, not technical either, because a lot of stocks went straight up. They were hard to predict. And that’s really how we got that mania. So my economic background helped, because a mania is an economic event. As we changed centuries now, we’re in another and different environment where the big pools of liquidity are really in the hands of hedge funds who also use a tremendous amount of leverage and other kinds of alternative investments. But we’re also seeing the development of the Sovereign Wealth Funds. And these are the new drivers of the markets.

I forgot to add, we still have some very large pools of money that are professionally day-traded. Day traders have not disappeared, but they have become professional. So there are quite a few large pools of money moving in and out through day trading. 

This is changing the character of the market. And day traders and hedge funds tend to be very technically oriented, and so we technicians might say this is a great thing. They may not be CMTs, but they’re in tune with the charts. And because they know their charts and can see how to use them creatively, I see a lot of false breakouts and breakdowns because they get in, generate the breakout, and then ride the wave. So I’m seeing more and more false breakouts which tend to be less predictable.

I find this to be a time when technical analysis is very popular, but it’s also very challenging.

MS: Because it can be manipulated? 

GD: Yes, because there are some very short-term players who are playing those breakouts, and they have a decent amount of capital.

MS: Is there anything else that is uniquely “you” that you’d like to include?

GD: Well, I guess one thing is that I’ve gone from being just an analyst to being an entrepreneur. It’s independent research. Wall Street seems to have a difficult time knowing how to get paid for research, and we see that there’s been, in the last five years, a continuous cut back in analysts and research departments, because there’s just not a good understanding of how to get paid. So the independent research industry, which I’m now a part of, is taking a lot of, I think, dollars from institutions. I mean, I get paid by institutions. So I’m actually an entrepreneur. My research is not readily available, it’s only available to clients who pay for it, and I do run my business within the Midwood umbrella. Dudack Research Group is a division of Midwood Securities, Inc. They love the publicity. They are my trading arm, compliance arm, and administration. But I still have my own PR.

MS: How do people learn about your research?

GD: Well we have a website that’s going to be revamped in 2008, to be more modern. But there are certain kinds of portfolio managers who might be, chief investment officers as well, who need to get a look at macro, or who are making sector decisions. I’ve found that a lot of global asset allocators really want the US view and the US sector view. The Dudack Research Group is a small group. There are three of us, but again, we are part of Midwood which is a group of 50. I could not do this without them. Midwood provides backup in really, a lot of ways.

MS: I’m so happy to meet you. This has been a pleasure. Thanks for your time.

GD: Thank you.

Contributor(s)

Molly Schilling

Molly Schilling is an independent trader and freelance writer. Molly has been a member of the MTA since 2005.

Gail Dudack, CMT

Gail M. Dudack is the managing director of Dudack Research Group, an independent institutional research firm that provides economic, fundamental, quantitative and technical strategy and tools to mutual funds, hedge funds and private money managers. Dudack Research Group is a division of...

New York and Charlotte Chapters Have Joint Meeting!

From New York: On Monday 2/11/08, the New York Chapter conducted an open discussion on technical analysis using our members’ own charts and analysis. Attendees were asked to submit 2-3 of their recent charts beforehand that they would be willing to discuss. In just under 90 minutes, 15 members of the New York Chapter took the podium to illustrate a couple of their recent trades or market calls. Most importantly, we presented the event jointly with the Charlotte Chapter via live webcast. Carson Dahlberg, CMT, Charlotte Chapter Chair, presented his charts via telephone, and we were able to interact with each other during the session.

The event was a great success, with both chapters gaining insight from its own members. We discovered that each of us used different techniques, varied time frames, and unique approaches to analyzing and trading the equity, futures, and currently markets. It was quite beneficial to get inside each others’ heads, and learn how others apply technical analysis to different markets and trading scenarios.

Our plan is to conduct these “open forum” sessions about every 3-4 months. If you are outside the New York area, please consider getting a group together, and join us on the next webcast. One of the great benefits of the Market Technicians Association is the ability to network with your peers from across the country and around the world. This was truly a dynamic exchange of ideas, and represents the future of what we can accomplish with monthly chapter meetings.

From Charlotte: Starting a new MTA Chapter in Charlotte has been great. Not only is a network developing here in Charlotte, but it is expanding to other cities as well: namely New York and Atlanta. For this February’s Charlotte Chapter meeting, we decided to take advantage of connectivity (no pun intended) and an invitation from David Keller, CMT to sit in on the NY Chapter’s meeting.

We are a new chapter that is currently getting the word out and growing, so this was an excellent opportunity to attract new attendance and to offer something different. It was great to sit in ‘live’ and dialogue about how Technical Analysts use charts in their day to day analysis, trading, and investing. Afterwards, we were also able to participate in the Q&A. The response from Charlotte was fantastic and we are looking forward to more in the future. Also in the works are plans for us to do something similar with the Atlanta Chapter.

Contributor(s)

David Keller, CMT

David Keller, CMT is Chief Market Strategist at StockCharts.com, where he helps investors minimize behavioral biases through technical analysis. Dave is a CNBC Pro Contributor, and he recaps market activity and interviews leading experts on his show “The Final Bar” on StockCharts...

Carson Dahlberg, CMT

Carson Dahlberg, who holds the Chartered Market Technician (CMT) designation, is a Data Scientist and App Engineer at Wells Fargo with over 20 years of experience in the financial markets, specifically technical and quantitative trading, research and education. Carson has worked for...

The MTA Educational Foundation and Seton Hall University

Fred Meissner, CMT and I were recently invited to attend the Annual Jim and Judy O’Brien Financial Markets and Economic Colloquium at the Stillman School of Business at Seton Hall University. We had the opportunity to meet with the guest speakers and, importantly, to see the facility and meet with some of the faculty. We were impressed with their interest in the operations of the financials markets, especially in technical analysis. The Stillman School has a financial laboratory with work stations equipped with computers, and Reuters and Bloomberg equipment.

This colloquium was their third annual event. The program consisted of a student presentation on the various economic programs of the Presidential candidates and the potential market impact, a keynote speech on the current economic environment by Chip Dickson of W2 Freedom LLC, formerly the chief U.S. Strategist for Lehman Brothers, and a panel of experts talking about the current state of the financial markets. The panel was led by Scott Rothbort, Professor of Finance at Seton Hall, and President of LakeView Asset Management. Other participants were Tony Dwyer, a long-time member of the MTA and Equity Market Strategist for FTN Midwest Securities; Doug Kass, Founder and President of Seabreeze Partners Management, LLC; Greg Peters, Chief U.S. Credit Strategist and Director of Global Fixed Income Research & Economics for Morgan Stanley; and Brian Reynolds, Chief Market Strategist, M.S. Howells & Co. Fred and I thought the students and the professionals did a fine job and the program was well received by the audience of students, teachers, and visitors.

At the reception which followed, Fred and I were able to speak with Dean Karen Boroff, Professor Tony Loviscek, Chair of the Finance and Legal Studies Department, and Professor Elven Riley. Dean Boroff was quite interested in promoting technical analysis at Seton Hall and in working with the MTA to do so. She suggested a three-day seminar for credit. I showed her the full course in technical analysis developed by the MTA Educational Foundation, hoping to interest her in offering it to Seton Hall students. Fred volunteered to teach the students how to make better use of their fi nancial laboratory for technical analysis purposes.

I believe the MTA and Seton Hall will be able to work together and I am excited about the possibilities. If there are any CMT holders who are willing and able to help us in teaching technical analysis at Seton Hall, please let the office know or contact me directly.

Sincerely,
Phil Roth, CMT
MTA President

Contributor(s)

Phil Roth, CMT

Philip J. Roth, who holds the Chartered Market Technician designation, was the Chief Technical Market Analyst at Miller Tabak + Co. from 2001 until April 2012. Phil was a Wall Street professional for 46 years, and has been in the industry for...

MTA at the New York Trader’s Expo

Trader’s Expo New York City, New York February 17th -19th, 2008

The Market Technicians Association (MTA) maintained a display booth at the recent Trader’s Expo in New York City, held on Feb 17th-19th, 2008. We had huge interest expressed by many participants at the Expo in our overall offering. During the Expo, the MTA put on a Market Forecast Panel for all participants which was one of the highest turnout events of the entire Expo. The panel included moderator Peter Austin, CMT, Ralph Acampora, CMT, Ken Tower, CMT and David Keller, CMT.

Some pictures of the event are shown here, for your interest. The Exposition was, by all measures, a huge success…..We plan on attending future Trader’s Expo. sessions around the country, as well as other related industry trade show events.

Special thanks to the volunteers who manned the booth (in addition to Headquarter staff) which included Tom Tirney, Dave Keller, Phil Roth, Michael Kahn and Ralph Acampora.

Contributor(s)

New MTA Members and CMTs

Several times throughout the year, the MTA would like to recognize those that have been granted Member Status and the CMT designation. During this time period, October ‘07 – ‘07, the new Members and CMT charter holders are as follows:

New Members:

Abularach, Mario E., MA
Bamert, Olivier, Switzerland
Bender, Gregory, NY
Boeckman, Steve C., CA
Breedis, Katherine, NY
Brogan, Terence W., MA
Burcher, Michael, NJ
Cantori, Barbara, Italy
Chapman, Brandon, UT
Choremi, Philip N., NY
Cook, Michael, CA
Dahlberg, Carson, NC
Davies, Scott, NY
De La Loma, Alexey, Spain
De Marco, Angelo, Canada
Dote, Patrick, NY
El Maghrabi, Amr, Egypt
Evans, H. Parker, FL
Gaebele, Karsten S., NJ
Goenka, Vinary, India
Gunther, John E., FL
Isaakidis, John, Canada
Job, Ken V., United Arab Emirates
Kini, Kiran P., DC
Kline, George W., CA
Kolloff, Sean, MA
Lang, Tyler S., KY
Lauderdale, Patrick J., IL
Lee, Derrick, Canada
Mayer-Godin, Benoit, Canada
McGovern, Kevin, NY
Meidell, Laif E., NV
Mokhtari, Sid, Canada
Murray, Neil, Canada
Nelissen, Ranjit, Netherland
O’Brien, Christopher J., MA
O’Rourke, Michael, PA
Oliveira, Fernando, NY
Palmliden, Frederic, TN
Petruska, Scott, KS
Picarda, Dominic, United Kingdom
Randazzo, Vincent, NJ
Rettew, Philip, NJ
Rodriguez, Angel L., NJ
Rogers, Douglas R., MA
Saunders, Greg C., MA
Schott, Jake, IL
Sowin, Joseph, NY
Stamenov, Ventsislav, AR
Strausbaugh, Justin, IL
Styrna, Joseph W., MI
Taylor, Stewart D., MA
Upson Robert G., NJ
Wang, Victoria, NY
Weber, Kris, NY
Wendell, Brandon, CA
William, Ron, United Kingdom
Wisdom, Rod, MO
Wozniak, David J., IN
Zmuda, Anthony, NJ

New CMTs:

Abularach, Mario E., MA
Bamert, Olivier, Switzerland
Bender, Gregory, NY
Boeckman, Steve C., CA
Breedis, Katherine, NY
Brogan, Terence W., MA
Burcher, Michael, NJ
Cantori, Barbara, Italy
Chapman, Brandon, UT
Choremi, Philip N., NY
Cison, Mark, IL
Cook, Michael, CA
Dahlberg, Carson, NC
Davies, Scott, NY
De La Loma, Alexey, Spain
De Marco, Angelo, Canada
de S.G. Elkaim, Esther, FL
Dote, Patrick, NY
El Maghrabi, Amr, Egypt
Evans, H. Parker, FL
Goenka, Vinary, India
Gunther, John E., FL
Isaakidis, John, Canada
Job, Ken V., United Arab Emirates
Kayser, Christopher S., Canada
Kini, Kiran P., DC
Kline, George W., CA
Kolloff, Sean, MA
Lang, Tyler S., KY
Lauderdale, Patrick J., IL
Lee, Derrick, Canada
Mayer-Godin, Benoit, Canada
McGovern, Kevin, NY
Mokhtari, Sid, Canada
Murray, Neil, Canada
Nelissen, Ranjit, Netherland
O’Brien, Christopher J., MA
O’Rourke, Michael, PA
Oliveira, Fernando, NY
Palmliden, Frederic, TN
Petruska, Scott, KS
Picarda, Dominic, United Kingdom
Piretti, Joseph, DE
Randazzo, Vincent, NJ
Rettew, Philip, NJ
Rodriguez, Angel L., NJ
Rogers, Douglas R., MA
Saunders, Greg C., MA
Schott, Jake, IL
Sowin, Joseph, NY
Stamenov, Ventsislav, AR
Strausbaugh, Justin, IL
Styrna, Joseph W., MI
Taylor, Stewart D., MA
Upson Robert G., NJ
Wang, Victoria, NY
Weber, Kris, NY
William, Ron, United Kingdom
Wisdom, Rod, MO
Wozniak, David J., IN

Contributor(s)

MTA Annual Award Presentation

The MTA Annual Award presented at the winter retreat went to Bill Doane, a technician’s technician. Bill ran the Fidelity Chart Room, known as the “War Room”, for better than 20 years. During that period he worked with most of the important technicians of his time, consulted with many important technicians from the prior generation and inspired many of today’s technicians. Bill was one of the founding members of the MTA and its seventh president. He spent a good portion of his career analyzing basing patterns and is well known for his work on “Big Bases”. Bill accepted the award and spoke for a half hour or so on his own history and the history of the War Room. (A recording of his presentation can be found on the MTA Annual Award page on www.mta.org) The inscription on the award bowl was written by his champion for the award, Sam Hale: “Trusted Technical Analyst, Advisor and Friend”

As part of an Award Committee project to post profi les of all MTA Award winners to the MTA website, we will be posting one for Bill Doane in due time. We could really use some help with this project. If you are willing to write a profile of one of the greats of technical analysis, please contact me at bbands@bollingerbands.com. There are lots of fine analysts to chose from and history is slipping through our fingers quickly, so, please, step right up; a paragraph or two is better that what we have now.

Contributor(s)

John Bollinger, CMT, CFA

John Bollinger is President and Founder of Bollinger Capital Management, Inc., an investment management company that provides technically-driven money management services and develops proprietary research for institutions and individuals. He is probably best known for his Bollinger Bands, which he developed in...

MTA Mid-Winter Retreat January 25-26th, 2008 St. Pete’s Beach, Florida

On January 25th and 26th, MTA Mid-winter Retreat participants met in St. Pete’s beach, Florida for 2 days of learning, networking and relaxation. There were over 135 participants in the Retreat, far greater attendance than in prior years!!!

On the first day, participants heard presentations from Jordan Kotick, Hank Pruden and John Bollinger. In addition, participants heard from Bill Doane, our 2008 MTA Annual Award winner. In the afternoon of Day One, the MTA held a market forecast panel with market specialists Phil Roth, Jeff Degraaf and Rick Bensignor as panelists.

On day 2, participants heard from Ned Davis, Frank Texeira and experienced round table topic experts from Jeff DeGraaf, Phil Roth, Sherman McClellan, Ned Davis, John Bollinger, Katie Townsend, Hank Pruden and Ken Tower.

Our survey results on the Retreat were excellent with most categories having over 95% total satisfaction (Outstanding or Above average). We appreciate all survey input and will be sure to take into account your comments for continuous improvement for future Seminars and Retreats. Several pictures of the social and Retreat events are included here for your viewing pleasure.

Contributor(s)

A Call for Papers

We need quality papers to be considered for publication for the Summer and Winter issues.

Your MTA Journal strives to establish the highest standard to present new ideas, practical solutions, and thought provoking concepts being utilized today within our industry. We use a ‘double-blind’ review standard where your name is not disclosed to the reviewers. An accepted paper gives you and your company a platform to shine and helps push our industry forward. As your new editor it gives me an opportunity to ask you a question as I review a few papers on file; “Where did our passion go for what we do?” 

It is not enough to write a paper about a method you believe does not work well. That is only the beginning. Use it as the start and motivation to find a better method that is backed by testing. Make a place within your industry by standing on the shoulders of those who brought you to your current level, and then find ways to add the next building block to help us all.

While statistical testing to back opinions is important to meet the expectations of the Academic community, we are not bound to publish works with titles only mathematicians can decipher. This is your Journal and the focus will broaden. We need real solutions to issues of indicator lag, global interaction and correlations, price projection, timing and cycle work. We need the passion back in our organization that is a focus on the possible, the practical, and perhaps even the imaginable. We need real answers for how we can improve the probability of our opinions and manage our risk exposure.

You will see that we want to bring you important historical work lost in the archives collecting dust that became a major milestone within our industry. We want to hear from those who have been on the frontline for decades and may have a system that may need a better way to test than just a small portion examined under a microscope. We will not exclude the geometric or classic methodology. If you had a fire to express and research your methodology to help grow your industry, now is the time to think about grabbing pen and mouse.

The Journal will no longer be one of the best kept secrets of the MTA. Starting this week there will no longer be a fee of $100 to obtain copies of prior articles. They will be made available to all from the MTA website and not hidden behind a firewall. Now get to work please as the Winter Journal needs you.

Contributor(s)

Connie Brown, CFTe, MFTA

Connie Brown founded Aerodynamic Investments Inc. in 1996 to advance the field of technical research using Gann theory. Prior to founding her company, Connie was an institutional trader for 12 years and then managed a futures hedge fund for six years, eventually...