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Albert Einstein, technical analysis and your portfolio

Friday, February 1, 2008 | Dylan Jovine

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WHAT CAN EINSTEIN'S THEORY OF RELATIVITY TEACH US ABOUT TRADING STOCKS?

That's a question I've been asking ever since I was old enough to understand both the stock market and Einstein's Theory of Relativity (read: last week).

But I think I'm starting to formulate a hypothesis about Einstein's Theory of Relativity and the Stock Market, and I want all of you reading this to help me flesh it out or shoot it down , if you're interested.

(This is just a hypothesis that's been marinating in my head. The way I test my own hypotheses in my circle of friends is to talk about them and have friends of mine challenge them. Over the course of years, if I test it in front of enough people and I hear enough credible arguments against it, I'll drop it. If there aren't any good challenges to it over a period of several years, and I think I've tested it in front of enough credible people, it'll become one of my theories. Not the most disciplined scientific method around but it's the way I roll nonetheless).

You see, before Einstein shattered conventional thinking with his theory in 1905, the world believed that time itself was constant. From Newton onward, everyone believed that there was one universal "clock" that ticked at the same speed no matter who you were, where you were, or where you were going.

But the young German patent clerk working from Bern, Switzerland, shattered that thinking when he theorized that time was not a fixed constant at all. From Einstein's point of view, Newton had it all wrong: there was no universal clock ticking at the same rate for everyone.

What he believed was that time, instead of being fixed like some gigantic clock in the sky, wasn't fixed at all - it was relative. What made it relative was the speed at which a body was moving relative to another body. In other words, the time clock would tick at the same rate for both Superman and Superwoman if they were both flying at the speed of light next to each other. It would also tick at the same rate if both Lois Lane and Clark Kent were both having dinner in the city together. But if Lois Lane was having dinner in the city, while Superman was flying around at the speed of light, the clock of time would tick differently for each of them relative to the other one.

As a professional investor, I've spent my entire career investing in different markets around the globe. And regardless of what security I've traded - whether it be stocks, bonds, options, currencies or commodities - or what country I've traded them in - one thing is certain: more often then not there is a human on the other side of the trade. And even if it's a computer executing the actual trade, you can bet your bottom dollar that its a human who programmed it.

And when there's a human on the other side of the trade that can only mean one thing: we're all governed by the rule of relative perception. In other words, we all make decisions about investing relative to one another.

Relative perception is how you view the market and other market participants relative to yourself. Unlocking the secrets to proper relative perception may hold the key to making big money in the stock market (or at least avoiding big losses).

Let me explain.

In the past 3 months the DJIA has dropped roughly 11.6%, from 14,280 to 12,600. That decline has brought on a wave of analysts pounding the table to "BUY" just because the market has declined relative to what it was trading at before it dropped.

That would be a mistake far too many people make each and every day. Just because the market looks cheap relative to when it was 14,200 doesn't mean it's cheap relative to what it could be trading at next year.

The same works with stocks. For the past three years, Citigroup (SYM: C) has been trading between $40 and $50 per share. In the past few months the stock has dropped to its current price of $28 per share.

All the shareholders who bought the stock in the past three years may feel a lot of pain now because the stock is lower relative to what they paid for it in the past three years. That may influence them to sell, while all the people who were waiting on the sidelines may think it looks cheap relative to the $40 - $50 price it was selling for last year.

Last, but not least, all the people who bought the stock between 1998 - 2000, and who still own it, see the stock back to where they bought it and think it looks cheap again relative to the price it was recently trading at.

From the example above it's easy to see that relative perception is the underlying system that governs technical analysis, as relative price movement determines the action that market participants take.

But the hypothesis I've been formulating in my head tries to take it one step further (and to think - I'm not even a technical analyst). And to accomplish that - to take this one step further - I could use your help.

So let me start by asking the following question: How do you see relative perception influencing the stock market as a whole (as opposed to individual prices)? 

Until next week,

Dylan Jovine

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Dylan Jovine
Contributing Editor
The Tycoon Report




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35 Comments

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  1. ANKIT (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    After reading your article and the comments people have written,i'd like to say that response and acceptance to your proposed hypothesis would be based on the relative perception of the readers (according to your own theory).I believe any universal theory applies and holds true for any given field or event.So try it out on other areas as well.all the best..
  2. Van (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Hi. As you probably realize, fiat money is also relatively valued - it has no "real" or absolute value either. You are therefore correct - doubly correct - that asset values are relative to time (their past performance and the currency value at the time). Like hitting a moving target while you are moving at the same time. Van
  3. Barry P (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I agree wholeheartedly with your analysis, however, investor psychology and risk acceptance has to be included. If those things did not exist, you would be right on.
  4. jack (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    you could probably just take a vote beause puplic sentiment seems to govern prices of securities not market fundementals
  5. Mervine (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Interesting.
  6. ademola (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I agree with yr hypothesis. However, i think the relative perception hyp should be based on the fact that a stock market is like an ecosystem. As one person looses another gains. Hence, any change is dependent on relative perception of the investors. I will be interested in yr further propositions on this. Thank u.
  7. Spurgeon (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Your concept of relative perception is a driving force in the market. Based on the individuals perception you always have buyers and sellers. An invester's instructional extension of this concept would point out that these price fluxiations typically cycle around a trend line for each stock unless there is a major change in the competition or economic climate.
  8. Ken (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Dylan,



    Interesting article, strange thoughts. A little disjointed. Something bothers me though.



    You go from Relative Time to Relative Perception, which is all that relative time actually is. You give a couple of examples of buy and hold investors facing hard decisions, and then you say something strange. You say,

    "From the example above it's easy to see that relative perception is the underlying system that governs technical analysis, as relative price movement determines the action that market participants take".

    Relative perception is the underlying system that governs all analysis, everything human, both technical and fundamental, even mechanical systems reflect their creators perspective.

    So how do these human perceptions influence the world? Obviously these perceptions cause beliefs and actions. All action is preceded by some sort of belief, and all belief is preceded by some perception. So we percieve things to be one way, we convince ourselves that things are actually that way, and we take action based on that belief.



    "Relative perception is how you view the market and other market participants relative to yourself. Unlocking the secrets to proper relative perception may hold the key to making big money in the stock market (or at least avoiding big losses)".

    This is the most important statement in the whole article. The key is perception.



    Our perceptions influence the market as they influence our lives. We act on our perceptions and beliefs. If we believe something strongly enough to act on it, and others concur, we create a trend.



    So, to answer the question of how I see relative perception influencing the market as a whole. The relative perception of market players is what drives trends. Big perceptions, major fundamental, and financial perceptions are what create the big trends. Smaller perceptions, news items, oversold and overbought conditions are what create the smaller trends.

    The entire market is built of trends, within trends, within trends. Choose a prefered time frame, or better yet three time frames, one above and one below the trading time frame. We trade in our chosen time frame, using the one above it for direction and support, and using the one below it for timing entrys and exits. No matter what time frame we choose to trade, there is always a longer timeframe for alignment and a shorter time frame for timing.
  9. kevin (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Hi Dylan



    While I agree with your thesis that relative perceptions may matter for the individual investor in his our her thought process. I do not think relative perceptions' of individual investors actually have much impact regarding future prices of specific equities.



    I would contend that price action in specific equities reflects the markets thoughts with regard to future price movement. My individual opinion is that these market thoughts result buy and sell decisions which are primarily based upon future expectations for the earnings growth and profit margin of these specific equities.



    In that regard, then the price you paid for the equity is irrelevant, the only decision metric that matters is your belief where the stock price will be in future.
  10. Ed (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Yes! The market is not efficient, it is based on perceptions AND RELATIVITY. GOOD TECHNICAL ANALYSIS coupled with a rigid set of do's and dont's to keep you from being suckered into thinking things are deals (over bought or over sold) need to be technically tested and verified before you jump. Fear is the major motivator in this area. don't be afraid of missing an opportunity and don't be afraid of taking advantage when your proven technical indicators of everyone else's emotions are unrealistically driving the market. go with the emotional flow if it is self serving. Be quick to jump out when the trend changes. The trend is your friend even when it is a group emotionally generated trend and not entirely based on economics etc. Remember, most of the market moves that will make you money or lose you money are not fundamental. Major corrections are fundamental economics catching up with emotional over stretched group thinking or group wishful thinking. When the fundamental writing is on the wall, any playing around with emotional generated trends that are out of phase with the fundamental trend can pop so quickly that you will not be able to avoid a loss.



    90% or more of the money moves are emotional but yet they are predictable because of how emotions are driven (mass psychology).



    Good article.

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