Author

Topic: What do you see here? (Read 778 times)

legendary
Activity: 1288
Merit: 1000
Enabling the maximal migration
April 30, 2013, 10:58:12 AM
#8

As a rational investor, I don't assume I can actually predict the peak of a bubble or the bottom of a crash.  Anyone who can do such can make arbitrarily as much money as they want so it's all irrelevant if you can.  If you can't though, you will be playing based on the averages.  A weekly average is perfectly valid if you aren't day-trading.

Bingo.
legendary
Activity: 2097
Merit: 1070
April 30, 2013, 10:52:03 AM
#7
I see a somewhat sustainable uptrend from $2 to $13

Yes, that appeared to happen very quickly. I wonder if it will retrace at some point.
sr. member
Activity: 348
Merit: 250
April 30, 2013, 10:48:27 AM
#6
It really not comparable. The weekly chart is throwing away important information because its too granular. Don't look for something that fits your idea of what the trends should be because you'll invariably find something that fits it.

It really doesn't.  The weekly average is still directly affected by the spikes and the crashes.  No data is "thrown out".  The reason it looks fairly smooth and less spike is because that is what the average value actually really looks like.

As a rational investor, I don't assume I can actually predict the peak of a bubble or the bottom of a crash.  Anyone who can do such can make arbitrarily as much money as they want so it's all irrelevant if you can.  If you can't though, you will be playing based on the averages.  A weekly average is perfectly valid if you aren't day-trading.
newbie
Activity: 23
Merit: 0
April 30, 2013, 10:45:24 AM
#5
It really not comparable. The weekly chart is throwing away important information because its too granular. Don't look for something that fits your idea of what the trends should be because you'll invariably find something that fits it.
sr. member
Activity: 348
Merit: 250
April 30, 2013, 10:41:18 AM
#4
That's not really weekly vs. daily... just a matter of log vs. algorithmic scale.

No, it's really not.  Here is the same thing without log scale-



Compare to 6-hour chart-



I'm just pointing out that if you ignore the brief spikes and dips and focus on the weekly averages, it looks a lot more like steady growth.  Sometimes when you look too close you miss the details.
legendary
Activity: 1666
Merit: 1057
Marketing manager - GO MP
April 30, 2013, 10:35:04 AM
#3
I see a somewhat sustainable uptrend from $2 to $13
newbie
Activity: 15
Merit: 0
April 30, 2013, 10:32:00 AM
#2
That's not really weekly vs. daily... just a matter of log vs. algorithmic scale.
sr. member
Activity: 348
Merit: 250
April 30, 2013, 09:41:33 AM
#1
I've noticed an interesting thing.  Instead of looking at hourly or daily charts, look at the weekly average chart.



The spike and crash doesn't look so big, does it?  It looks a lot more like a tiny dip and then continued growth.  

I wonder where we go from here?
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